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Published with The New York Times and The Washington Post
jM7.W
* *■
PARIS, THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1970
Established 1887
■s
'd ■
s Reportedly Warn
Nixon of Carswell Rejection
WASHINGTON. March 25
(UPl*- — Senate Republican
Madera have told the White
-goose, that, opponents . of . S u-
-gne court nominee G. H&r-
Ijjd Carswell have enough
roles to return the nomination
to the judiciary Committee—
tantamount to lriD i ng it.
ti?£ learned 1 today that the
administration got- • the word
daring intense backstage ma-
nenveriog lor an agreement to
^ A . definite time for a vote
m the Carswell nomination and
ab & $24.6 billion school-aid bilL
»We have informed the White
goose that there will be a move
to recomit the nomination and
that in our opinion the move
vOI succeed— that there are not
enough votes to defeat," the
fendquhtp source said.
A Senate Republican leader,
not the' source of the report,
said in .his opinion that such
i recommittal vote .would be
set for Monday April 6. Sen.
Hagh Scott, -.R, Pa., is com-
mitted to vote for Judge Cars-
well. .
G. Harrold Carswell
Headcounts going on through-
out the day by both opponents
and proponents of. the nomina-
tion spurred speculation that
Judge Carswell might ask that
his name be withdrawn if it ap-
peared that recommittal to the
Senate Judiciary Committee
would succeed.
A nomination or bill recom-
mitted to a committee rarely
ever returns to the Senate floor
again.
The disclosure of what the
White House had been told
came after liberal senators
fighting the nomination of the
50-year-old Florida Judge claim-
ed that they did have enough
votes to send the nomination
back to committee.
Sen. Edward W. Brooke. JL,
Mass., said that he was con-
fident that “there will be suf-
ficient votes in the Senate to
deny Caswell confirmation."
Sen. Birch Bayh, D„ Ini,
leader of the Carswell oppo-
nents in bis party, said that
he could count, within "one or
two votes," enough senators op-
posed to return the nomination
to the committee.
The strategy of trying to re-
commit the nomination been
developing for several days.
Sen. Fred R. Harris, D.. Okla_
(Continued on Page 3, Col. 5)
•"'i
U.s. Banks Gut Prime Rate to 8%;
News Sparks Stock Rally in N.Y.
By .Natalie Layzell
7~^ NEW YORK, March 25.—
Uiiyrta 'three largest US. banks. Bank
cf America, First National City
— snd Chase Manhattan,- cut the
rime interest rate to 8 percent
.lofcm the record high. 8J> percent
tallowing an initial- roH. back this
■''v Doming by Irving Trust Co.
" ' News of Irving Trust's cut im-
aediately ignited the best, rally of
' tack prices so far- this year. On
be New York Stock Exchange, the
m Jones industrial average soar-
’d. over .20 points before settling
xtiL later in the day. ' ' .
" Tbe^cut in the lending Tate
-jfteoa bank's mosfcorCdit-worthy
■ragtanere was by no means u n a n i-
nras, however.
" 6ome large banks did not im-
nedlateiy go along.
' ..fa . Washington, the White
. ....jjfonse welcomed the cut.
-"The administration is pleased
; .o see a decline in market interest
ites which will be an important
.. actor in • improving access to
_ Ssffi at a more reasonable cost
housing industry, state and
- .local borrowers and small busi-
. mss," presidential spokesman Ron
k Ziegler said.
The rate, which has been at 8.5
percent since last June, is in effect
.tte huninnnn commercial lending
nte and sets the tone for borrow-
ing money throughout the ecan-
. —finis;. .
Traditionally, a rate cut would
signal that the government 's anti-
l '"‘ bQaHqnary program was working,
. and that the demand for borrowed
money had relented to the point
where bankers could seek to make
borrowing more attractive.
^ However, industry's demand far
; money, -viewed in terms of Earo-
. .-dollar b or r o w i ngs, issuance ot cam-
... mercial paper and the extremely
. .* -• heavy calendar for new bond of-
m- tertogg, indicates this is not the
; eaa .jet .-.:.
George ; ]gurphy, chairman of
v •: Irving Treat described the action
ss “antMpator- " He said it was
fime Jtar ttu bank "to show it is
part of the great team making up
the economy. '
“If we determined the move on
supply and demand we would not
have reduced the prime rate to-
day," he said. Bather, be went
on. the bank had to adjust for all
the forces at work in the economy
«nd referred to “clear Federal
Reserve easing of a modest nature"
in its monetary policy.
In annormning its Cut, Bank Of
America president A.W. Clausen
acknowledged that it was "pre-
mature," at least from some stand-
points. '
*We feel that while premature
in terms of overall liquidity, eco-
nomic and credit conditions are
rapidly making a reduction in the
prime rate feasible," be said.
“Such a reduction is in the public
interest and can have a favorable
public policy impact.
"The combination of more prac-
tical and credit condi-
tions *nri important public policy
considerations axe the bases for
our decision to immediately re-
inforce the move to bring down
interest rates.” he said.
'Eurodollar Effect
[In Europe, the effect of the rate
cut is not at all dear. The Euro-
dollar Tnark-pt. through which rate
changes are quickly transmitted
across national borders, is con-
sidered by bankers to be more
susceptible to shifts in demand for
money .rather than changes in
Interest rates.
[Thus, if U.S. borrowings, now
amounting to about one-thlxd the
Eurodollar total, continue at
anything near present levels — or
go up as a result of increased UB.
demand— rates here would tend to
(Continued on Page 9. CoL 7)
Agree to Return to Work
U.S. Mailmen Vote to Accept
Union-Government Accord
to
NEW YORE; March 25 (UPI).
Striking mailmen voted today
accept a wage hike agreement be-
tween postal union leaders and the
government and agreed to return
to work immediately.
The eight-day-old . strike, which
originated in New York and ended
• Planned U. S. budget sur-
plus wiped out by postal
strike.. Page 3.
there, followed a back-to-work
movement by strikers in a dozen
other states. Some 23.500 soldiers,
sailors, marines and National
Guardsmen assigned to post of-
fices here were expected to be
withdrawn by the end of the day.
New York Postmaster John Sfera-
chan announced that normal mail
‘Sick Out ’ by Air Traffic Men
Cripples Some U.S. Airports
. Washington, March as
■l >®li.— Air traffic controllers be-
a “tick and tired” Slowdown
the nation today, crippling
***** service in some areas.
Hbre than halt of the men who
as traffic directors for air-
i® 1 ®* reported they were sick or
j«o tired to work, in spite of wam-
; i"tt bf their employer, the Federal
- Administration, that the
*kk rat" is illegal and that severe
^“tittierinay be imposed on those
*toustay OH the. Job.
jpfc afternoon, a court ordered
Controllers’ organization not to
ticcaige. a. strike.
District Judge Matthew F.
<7525*6 issued a temporary re-
• Owning order after a half-hour
With attorneys for the
■ ^reQers and the government,
onto is effective to April 6,
there will be a bearing on a
a aiunent motion for a prelimina-
which would forbid the
jobation iwxm “in any manner
ling, encouraging, ordering,
mgaj iw g or taking part in
ck stoppage or slowdown,”
feting with air traffic,
in the case of postal work-
■* *be controllers cannot legally
w against the government. The
Wealonai Air Traffic Cantrol-
.W. Organization avoided calling
strike, but said the men were
resting oa belter working con-
'teas and bargaining rights.
Based on reports by the con-
trollers' organization, the FAA and
spokesmen in local areas, this was
the picture:
NEW YORK — Fifty-six of 129 con-
trollers were missing at the control
center atMacArthur Field, Ixmg Is-
land, which controls airline traffic
over a wide area around New York
and Philadelphia. Landings and
takeoffs at LaGuardia were cut
from a normal average of about
one a minute to one every hve
minutes.
PITTSBURGH— About 90 per-
cent of controllers, were missing for
day shifts at Greater Pittsburgh
Airport, and the FAA- said that
was one of its most acute problems,
although supervisory personnel at-
tempted to keep some traffic mov-
ing. *
CHICAGO — Operations were re-
ported normal at the nation’s
busiest airport. O'Hart but flight
departures were delayed up to half
an hour because of delays at other
airports.
WASHINGTON— Twenty of 107
controllers were missin g , with de-
lays in both takeoffs and land in g s
—partly because of slowdowns at
other airports.
MIAMI— Twenty-five of 78 men
failed to show for work, and a
limit, of two departures an hour
was imposed on flights to New
York, for example. This was one-
third the average rate..
delivery will resume tomorrow
morning.
Gustave Johnson, president of
Branch 36 of the National Associa-
tion of Letter Carriers, told strik-
ers the agreement provided for a
12 percent pay increase retroactive
to last October, complete payment
by the Post Office Department of
health and medical benefits, top
pay after eight years instead of
the current 21, and total amnesty
for strikers.
The rally of 2,000 strikers voted
, to accept what Mr. Jo hnson de-
scribed as a “settlement” athough
Mr. Johnson said he had “no
guarantee” that congress would
draft such wage-raise legislation.
The Brooklyn Postal Union and
other unions were scheduled to vote
oh the settlement later in the day
— a day which saw UJS. troops de-
livering mail for the first time in
the nation’s history. Man carriers
and clerks already had returned to
work in parts of Brooklyn, Queens,
Staten Island and at K e nn edy Air-
port „ ,
Meanwhile, House and Senate
conferees began hammering out a
compromise pay bill, and members
expressed confidence that legisla-
tion could be worked out
Sen. Gale McGee, D„ Wycx, the
leader of the Senate conferees, said
that it was the feeling of the group
that all federal employees should be
Included in the pay increase bill.
He said that a general raise would
be to President Nixon* benefit
<rint»e he would not be "rewarding
the wildcatters and ignoring those
who obeyed the law.”
Last wight postal workers in
all ar eas except central. New York
City returned or agreed to return
to work.
Today’, before going Into the
meeting. Mr. Blount said that the
mails were "approaching nor-
malcy.” . . ,
' , The postmaster general saw
that he anticipated full discussions
ol all issues but "if you don’t
start with pay, you're being less
than realistic.”
He also told newsmen that the
embargo on mail to New York
City had been lifted smee ah
postal workers were back on the
lob except in central Manhattan,
and that even there 20 percent of
the postal employees had reported
Earlier in the day. Sen. McG«
and Sen. Hiram Fong. R. Hawaii,
the ranking Republican on th-
post Office Committee, met witn
President Nixon on how to avoid
an other crisis-
Big Four
Meeting
In Berlin
Numerous Issues
At Talks Today
By David Binder •
BERLIN, March 25 (NYTl. — The
four victorious powers of .World
War H— the United States, the
Soviet Union, Britain and France —
prepared to meet here tomorrow
cm the perennial Berlin problem.
The motives far this first meet-
ing on Berlin in II years diverge
sharply between East and West.
But in a period when both sides
are moving toward negotiations on
a variety of political and military
issues, there is a grain of hope
that some useful ty*«^mninr^f> t1 rmn
might eventually be reached on
Berlin, as well.
The contacts leading to tomor-
row morning's meeting in the old
Allied Control Council Building, on
Elszholzstrasse — a vestige of fleet-
ing post-war Allied unity— begr-i
just a year ago in the wake of the
last major East-West confronta-
tion over Berlin.
At the time, the Soviet Union
backed down from grave threats
to impede air and land access to
West Berlin, isolated 110 miles
Communist East Germany, in
retaliation for ***« staging of the
West German presidential election
here.
Those two issues— access to West
Berlin and the activity of Bonn
politicians here— remain flip prin-
cipal bargaining points on the
agenda of tomorrow's meeting.
There is stai no plausible ex-
planation why the Russians re-
treated from their threats, al-
though it happened at a tune of
serious border clashes between the
Soviet Union and China.
Belief Delight
However, it is known that the
relief and delight in Western
Allied quarters over the sudden
Soviet shift were the main fac-
tors prompting the diplomatic
so dp dings that led to tomorrow’s
conference.
Last autumn the three Allies
handed over Identical notes in Mos-
cow requesting a new round of
Berlin talks an the following
agenda:
improvement of transit of per-
sons an* goods between West Ber-
lin and West Germany, re -establish-
ment of trade, transit and tele-
phone lines between East and West
Berlin and. removal of discrimina-
tory limitations on West Berlin's
trade iwtth Soviet bloc countries.
The Allied aim is thus to ease
the situation of the West Berlin-
ers and their economy, which have
been subjected to continual pres-
sure and harassment by East Ger-
many over the last dozen years.
For their part, the Russians
have indicated over the last three
months -that they are not overly
interested in the Berlin Issue at
this time.
But they have made clear that
(Continued on Page 2. CoL X)
Associated press.
FINAL WORDS — U.S. Ambassador Sargent Sh river
uses an armchair for a podium as he makes a farewell
speech just before leaving Fans. Listening at left
are Mrs. Shriver and their two sons, Mark and Anthony.
De Gaulle Sends Flowers
Shriver Quits Paris for U.S.,
Calls Return Nixon’s Decision
PARIS, March 25.— A huge bou-
quet of gladioli was Gen. Charles
de Gaulle's farewell to Ambassa-
dor and Mis. R. Sargent Shriver
as they left Paris far the United
States today.
The flowers were brought by
Col. Jean dEscriennes, Gen. de
Gaulle's aide-de-camp. “We have
received” said Mr. Shriver, "a
great honor.”
The Shrivers and four of their
five children flew out of Orly
Airport aboard a Boeing-747 after
23 months of Paris residenc e .
“I would have gladly stayed on
two, three or four years more.”
he said during the farewells. Lest
the French think he wanted to
leave, he added that it -was “Presi-
dent Nixon's decision."
The Shrivers were sent off by
several French diplomatic friends,
plus Philip Habib, UJS. representa-
tive at the Paris peace talks, and
members of the embassy. He fin-
ished his official farewells last
week.
Asked whether he would seek the
governorship of Maryland, he said
he was “interested” in the possi-
bilities * but he hadn’t yet decided.
Nixon Bids Congress Stiffen
Laws to Cope With Bombing
By Carroll Kilpatrick
WASHINGTON, March 25 CWPL
— President Nixon asked Congress
today to stiffen federal laws deal-
ing with bombings and bomb
threats and .to' provide the death
penalty if a fatality occurs.
A week ago Mr. Nixon told con-
gressional' leaders that he would
ask far new laws to deal with the
rash of bombings across the coun-
try.
In a statement today he said
that- many of the recent bombings
“have been the work of political
fanatics, many of them young
criminals posturing as romantic
revolutionaries."
“They must be dealt with ,0s the
potential murderers they are." he
said.
Several members of Congress
have introduced bills that would
deal with some of the proposals
the President made. Deputy At-
torney General Richard G. Kl e in-
dienst predicted that Congress
wonld act promptly to bring out
a MIL
But there are a number of dif-
ferent approaches to the problem,
including a proposal by Rep. Char-
les A. Vanik. D, Ohia that would
reply on the ta x ing .power to re-
quire registration of those manu-
facturing. distributing and selling
explosives.
Different-Committees .
Hep. Vanik’s proposal would be
considered by the House Ways and
jur^ns Committee,- -while most of
the other plans, including the
President's, would require Judi c iary
Committee action.
Hep. W illiam E- Mlnshall, R*
Ohio, introduced a bill to restrict
the distribution and sale of blast-
ing- materials and Rep. Don Brotz-
man. R* Colo, a bill to increase
ten-fold the penalties for inter-
state shipment of explosives.
-'Recent, months have brought an
Lpio^ming increase in. the num b er
Of criminal bombings in the cities
Of our country,” the President said.
“in recent weeks, .the situation
has become particularly acute, as
telephoned threats and actual
bombings have sent fear through
many American communities."
The President said iris proposals
were not designed to displace state
and local authority. “Our purpose
is to assist state and local, govem-
( Continued on Page 3, CoL 1)
“I want to see which way the wind
fas blowing." he added.
In a printed statement, the am-
bassador said. "Never in the rich
history of relations between our
two countries have the President
of France and the President of the
United States established a more
Crank and. close relationship.
*T also find comfort in the fact
that' during' these past two years
I have been witness to a renais-
sance in Franc o-Ameri can cooper-
ation that I hold so important.
T assure you,” he told the crowd
over the noise of a brass band out-
side. “that I will come back to
France soon and often."
Watson Fears Trade War
WASHINGTON, March 25 (API.
—Arthur K. Watson. President
Nixon's nominee as a mb assador to
France, said today he fears “we
are an the brink of a trade war."
Mr. Watson, an Inter nationa l
Busin es Machines Corp. executive
told the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee he has loDg feared' that
the higher tariffs of the Common
Market' countries could result in
counter-steps by US. government
and business. -
• "in some areas,” he said, “the
world has- made a 180-degree turn
from reciprocal trade.” which he
said he favors.
m response to a question about
whether he had ever ventured an
opinion on the size of US. forces
in Europe, Mr. Watson said that
in an appearance before the House
Ways and Means Committee, he
had' expressed concern that the
United States still had troops there
after 25 years. - -
“It occurred to me that this
extensive expenditure' on military
affaire might be a contributing
cause," Sen. J- William Fulbrigbt,
D_ Ark., said.
Mr. Watson said he agreed It
had a major impact.
Israelis Report
Downing 4 MiGs
Over Suez Canal
By James Feron
JERUSALEM. March 25 (NYTi .—The Israeli Army spokesman said
today that four Egyptian MiG-21 jet fighters were downed by Israeli
Sets in a morning air battle over the Suez canal. He said all Israeli
planes returned to their base.
It was the heaviest Egyptian loss In a single day since 11 planes
were downed in an all- day' series of battles six months ugo. Israel
says 80 Egyptian planes have been downed since the June, 1967, war.
The Israelis have lost 11 planes on the cjinal front in the same
but two brought down.
period, all
bv ground fire. The Egyptians say
they have destroyed nearly 350
Israeli fighters, a figure that may
exceed Israel's combat strength.
[In Cairo, a military spokesman
i?ptH an Egyptian commando force
tonight crossed the Suez Canal and
blasted an Israeli Hawk missile
site with mortars and surface-to-
surface missiles, Reuters reported.
The commandos penetrated six
miles east of the Bitter Lakes
area in the southern sector of the
canal, the spokesman said, and
returned safely to base without
encountering any resistance.
[Successive explosions were set
off in Israeli amunitipn and rocket
dumps, the spokesman said. The
commandos reported on their re-
turn that the Israeli defenders
were taken by surprise and that
their lack of resistance indicated
they suffered heavy losses.]
Today's air battle came during
the first of three extensive air
raids by Israeli assault aircraft
along a 70-mile length of the ca na l
from Qantara to Fort Suez.
Radar stations, anti-aircraft sites
pt,h artillery positions were attack-
ed by the Israeli jets, according to
the ftfflr.ift'i communique, in addi-
tion to “other targets up to a depth
of 15 miles.”
SAM Sites
It was not known if the other
targets could be the Soviet-made
SAM-3 anti-aircraft missiles re-
portedly being installed and oper-
ated by Russian soldiers and sol-
diers of the United Arab Republic.
The Israelis apparently are en-
gaged in a systematic effort to el-
iminate or neutralize every pos-
sible military site along the ca n a l
up to a depth of 15 miles. They
have been bombing enemy tar-
gets in this manner for weeks,
but most intensively in the last
several days.
A high-ranking Israeli officer
told newsmen visiting an air
base in Israel today that there
are three target areas: from the
canal bank to about five miles
(Con tinned on Page 2, Col- 2)
Rogers Sees
Soviet Envoy
On Mideast
Dobrynin lo Confer
Later With U.S. Aide
WASHINGTON. March 25 <UPII.
— Secretary of State William P.
Rogers and Soviet Ambassador
Anatoly Dobrynin met today but
made no decision on whether to
resume direct American-Russian
negotiations on a Middle East peace
plan.
They agreed, however, that Mr.
Dobrynin would confer soon with
Assistant Secretory of State for
the Middle East Joseph Sisco to
continue exploring the possibilities
of renewing the direct discussions
which ended in a deadlock last
December.
State Department Press Officer
Robert McCloskey said that it was
safe to assume that Mr, Rogers
pressed Mr. Dobrynin on the four-
point American program he an-
nounced Monday to try to 1 Jimln-
lsh hostilities and enhance the
prospects for peace.”
Mr. Dobrynin spent 55 minutes
with Mr. Rogers and Mr. Sisco
and then went to Mr. Sisco’s of-
fice for 15 minutes more before
slipping out of the building by
way of the secretary’s private
elevator to the basement in order
to avoid newsnen awaiting him in
the lobby.
The department spokesman, in
response to questions, made It
clear that, despite the agreement
on a future meeting, he could
not say that bilateral negotiations
actually have been resumed.
Mr. Rogers is understood to be
especially interested, following the
UB. refusal to provide Israel with
warplanes "for the time being,”
to get the Russians to agree to
talk about a general agreement
about aims in the area.
Palestinian Guerrillas Fight
Christian Arabs in Lebanon
•R MiH irr March 25 (AFL —
Arab guerrillas fought machine-
gun battles with Leban ese moun-
tain villagers today, then kidnapped
the son of a powerful Christian
political leader to spark fresh
violence In the capital.
in a separate incident, Lebanese
troops clashed with guerrWss in a
Palestinian refugee camp on the
road to Beirut's International Air-
port.
At least ten guerrillas were known
to have been killed and 17 wound-
ed in the day’s fighting.
The guerrillas promised to give
them a mass funeral In Beirut
tomorrow in def i ance of a govern-
ment ban on demonstrations.
“There is a devilish plan aimed
at liquidating the Palestine guer-
rilla movement in Lebanon and
throwing Lebanon into a sea of
Terrorists Kidnap Paraguayan
Dominicans to Free 20 to Save U.S. Envoy
SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican
Republic, March 35 (AF). — A gov-
ernment spokesman said that the
UJ5. air attach 6 abducted yesterday
would be freed late today in ad-
vance of the release of about 20
prisoners demanded by his kid-
nappers.
Presidential Press Secretary Cesar
Herrera also said that the pris-
oners would be taken to the Santo
Domingo a irpo r t and flown directly
to a foreign country, possibly
Mexico. ■
The American attache, Lt. CoL
Donald J. Crowley, is “safe and
sound,” Mr- Herrera said.
The government earlier d e c li ned
to release all the prisoners demand-
ed by the kidnappers in ex c ha n g e
for Col. Crowley’s Hie.- It said that
it would release only 20 of the 24
demanded.
The kidnappers had rejected the
government’s offer to free only 20
but said that they had “postponed
the shooting of CoL Crowley.”
Just before the expiration of the
A PP riling. Police Chief Gen. Guil-
lermo Guzman Acosta rejected the
ultimatum and said, that if CoL
Crowley wes» killed, the. political
AP.
Lt. CoL Donald J. Crowley
prisoners bring held “will be sorry.”
Gen. Gunuan added that the gov-
ernment knew the identity of CoL
Crowley’s kidnappers, “and they will
share his fate” if he were to be
killed.
Paraguayan Kidnapped
BUENOS AIRES; March 25 (AP).
—Argentine l e f tist terrorists threat-
ened today to execute a kidnapped
Paraguayan diplomat unless police
freed two of their companions by
midnight tonight.
A Paraguayan Embassy spokes-
man said that Argentine police
had agreed to meet kidnappers*
demands to secure the release ot
Waldemar Sanchez, who was seized
by terrorists yesterday on the eve
of a visit by Paraguayan President
Alfredo Stroessner.
Report Unconfirmed
Argentine police have refused to
confirm that they have agreed to
the demands for the release of two
members of the leftist Argentine
Liberation Front.
A report, which could not im-
mediately be confirmed, said that
the. police were planning to send
the two prisoners, Carlos Dellanave
and' Alejandro Rodolfo Baidu, to
Mexico within a lew hours.
Mr. Stroessner arrived for talks
with Argentine President Juan
Carlos Ongania and an Easter va-
cation in an Andes ski resort. He
was met by Mr. Ongania at the
Buenos Aires airport, which had
been sealed. by police. 1
blood for the benefit of imperial-
ism and. Zi on i sm ." declared the
Palestine Liberation Organization.
Bashir Gemayel. son o£ Leba-
non’s Public Works and Transport
Minister Pierre Gemayel, was
snatched from his car as he. passed
el-Zaatar refugee camp on the
outskirts of Beirut
Units of the older Mr. Gemaycl’3
Falangist militia, a heavily armed
private army, poured out in a bid
to force the son's release.
The two sides fought a series of
ru n n i ng gun battles around the
camp before government author-
ities extracted a promise from the
guerrillas that Bashir would bo
freed.
Armed men meanwhile roamed
Beirut's Moslem quarter, forcing
shops to close and ordering people
off the streets.
Lebanon's cabinet met in emer-
gency session to decide on measures
to damp down the crisis, which
threatened a repetition of last
November’s violence in which at
least 50 died in clashes between
the army artri Palestinian guer-
rilla forces.
The involvement of Mr. Ge-
mayel's Falangist followers creat-
ed a new powder-keg situation fra:
Lebanon. Extreme rightist and
predominantly Christian, they are
the traditional foes of Lebanon's
Moslem community. The country is
almost equally divided between
Christians and Moslems.
Earlier today Palestinian guerril-
las had fought two gun battles
with the inhabitants of the Chris-
tian Arab village of Kahale. five
miles east of Beirut. A Palestinian
spokesman said nine guerrillas
were killed and several wounded.
Today’s fighting came less than
24 hours after & raging gun battle
between the guerrillas and a band
of cigarette smugglers in Beirut in
which three guerrillas were killed
and 14 wounded.
The tattle in Kahale stemmed
from yesterday’s incident
A funeral procession of Palesti-
nian guerrillas was driving the
body ot one of yesterday’s dead to
Amma n, in Jordan, for burial
when it was fired upon.
The Palestinians said lt was an
ambush, but an official govern-
ment statement said the shooting
.(Confirmed on Page 2, CoL
i
i
. i
Page 2
INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, MARCH 26. 2970
♦ *
Not Strong Enough No w
Nasser Admits Egyptians
Can’t Force Mideast Solution
CAIRO . March 25 iUPIk—
Egypt is not militarily strong
enough at the moraras to force
Israel into negotiating a just Middle
East political settlement. Egyptian
President Gamal Abdel Nasser
said In a speech to the National
Assembly today.
"There is no hope at the present
time of reaching a political set-
tlement or reaching that degree
of strength '.hat would make our
enemy feel we can use it to get
our rights if we do not get them
by political means, " he said.
air. Nasser retlterated Egypt’s
willingness to accept a political
solution that would include com-
plete Israeli withdrawal and solu-
tions to the Palestinian refugee
problem. but charged that the
United States had never been in-
terested In a peaceful solution, be-
ta v*,-. such a settlement would be
an Arab pollifcal victor.-.
No Reference to U.S. Jets
Although not referring to the
U.S. decision to defer the additional
sale of Jet fighters to Israel, Mr.
Nasser attacked the announced
economic aid to Israel as "essen-
tially military aid.”
Mr. Nasser said, "America, when
tt urges limitation of arms ship-
ments at a time when it itself
declares Israel to be militarily
Berlin Talks
Start Today
f Coni timed from Pape 1)
If the three Allies want to talk
about Berlin at all. then the Sov-
iet Union is going to insist on
raising two matters dose to its
heart — the first being the aboli-
tion of West Germany’s political
presence here in the form of par-
liamentary sessions and the like,
and the second being Moscow’s
desire to expand its own presence
in West Berlin as a fourth "guar-
antor" power.
Nominally the Western side is
insisting on talking about "greater
Berlin.’' including the Eastern sec-
tor. which East Germany claims to
be “the capital of the German
Democratic Republic."
The Allies base their position on
protocols drawn up In 1944 in Lon-
don. which foresaw an occupation
administration of the capital of
the German reich. But these pro-
tocols have grown moldy with age.
The Communists say they are no
longer valid. The Western powers
themselves view their current
status here as deriving from the
conquest of Germany. But civilian
access derives from a “common
law" accretion of rights and privi-
leges over the last 25 years.
Police Sallies
In practice, the Allies acknow-
ledge the withdrawal of Enst Ber-
lin from "four-power'' supervision
with the tiny exception of occa-
sional Western military police
sn Hies into the Eastern sector in
patrol cars.
By the same token, the Allies are
preparing to talk tomorrow about
accommodations over West Berlin
alone, which is tantamount to ac-
cepting the Communist thesla that
East Berlin is no longer a matter
for four-power discussion.
According to authoritative
sources, the Western tactic in the
r.ew Berlin talks will be to Insist
that while the vestigial four-power
Flatus lor Berlin remains unim-
paired. the Allies are nevertheless
Interested in negotiating a kind of
"superstructure’' of improved con-
ditions for West Berlin on top of
that status.
On the other hand, the Com-
munist side has hinted repeatedly
in the last two months that it
would prefer to alter the status of
West Berlin into what they call "a
special political entity.”
Despite disagreement on the cur-
rent status or West Berlin, a cer-
tain community of agreemcn. seems
to hRve developed between Wash-
ington and Moscow on the funda-
mental concept of what to do
about divided Germany as a whole.
It now appears that- as efforts
to relax tensions in Central Europe
gather momentum, both the Rus-
sians and Americans have re-
discovered a vital interest in re-
taining a voice in any settlements
that involve the German nation a^
a whole. These would include a
final fixing of Germany's eastern
borders and a formal rapproche-
ment between East and West Ger-
many as envisaged in last week’s
Erfurt meeting between East Ger-
man Premier Willi Stoph and West
German Chancellor Willy Brandt.
Since both German states are
putatively sovereign, the only place
where Soviet and American
interests converge in practice is in
West Berlin. For this reason, both
the superpowers regard the talks
beginning tomorrow as their share
of the mortgage on the future of
Germany.
superior to the Arabs, is support-
ing and strengthening the Israeli
aggression.’'
Mr. Nasser warned that Egypt
would accept America’s call for a
cease-fire only if coupled with Is-
raeli withdrawal.
Unless this condition and the
plight of the refugees are settled,
the United Arab Republic has “no
alternative hut to use force to
regain our rights," he said.
Jet Policy Denounced
Egypt earlier today officially de-
nounced. both the recent US. deci-
sion to supply Israel with $100
million in economic aid and the
decision to defer supplying any
additional warplanes.
In the first direct government
reaction to President Nixon's move
Egypt’s official spokesman. Dr.
Ismat Abdel Meguld, also warned
the United States to "consider
carefully and clearly her interests
in the Middle East."
Noting that the United States had
agreed only to defer the decision
on the sale of the jets. Dr. Meguid
said: "It is evident the United
States government insists upon
maintaining the present Israeli air
superiority notwithstanding that
Israeli is an aggressor occupying
the territories of three Arab coun-
tries. - ’
Israel to Question U.S.
JERUSALEM. March 25 (UPD.—
Israel, concerned about the latest
Soviet moves in the Middle East
will press lor an immediate reap-
praisal of American policy on the
region, diplomatic sources said to-
day.
The Israelis will try to sound
Washington on possible American
action to counter increasing Soviet
Involvement in the Middle East,
the sources said.
America's over-conservative es-
timates of the Russian penetration
into Egypt are believed here to be
at the root of the recent American
decision to withhold, further jet
shipments to Israel.
Kidnapping ,
Arab Clashes
In Lebanon
Coast Guard Dismisses 9
NEW LONDON. Conn.. March 25
CUPI'.— ' The Coast Guard announc-
ed yesterday that nine cadets have
been dismissed from the Coast
Guard Academy here for pos-
session and use of marijuana.
(Continued from Page I)
was due to a misunderstanding.
Two guerrillas died and two were
wounded.
Guerrillas swarmed over the
hillside and took up positions
while Interior Minister Kamal
Jumblatt, the guerrilla leadership
and the notables of Kahale tried
to settle the incident.
Casualties among the villagers
were not determined.
Clash Near Beirut
While the fighting was under
way in Kahale. guerrillas in the
Chatilla camp, near Beirut, shot
at a neighboring apartment block
housing Lebanese Army officers.
Army troops immediately spread
out around the camp and traded
fire with the guerrillas for about
half an hour, eyewitnesses said.
Officials at the United Nations
Building nearby watched the battle
from the roof. Shops in Beirut's
Moslem quarter ran down their
shutters when armed civilians drove
tlirough town firing machine guns
into the air from the back of a
truck. Pedestrians fled to safety-
down side streets.
Following yesterday’s battle. Pal-
estinian sources reported that
guerrillas in all 16 refugee camps
in Lebanon have been placed in a
state of alert.
A&sdcu'icd ?rw.
LONG VOYAGE HOME — The steam tug- Eppleton Hall, which left England 6 months
ago, churns under the Golden Gate Bridge into San Francisco Bay. The 105-foot
side-wheel paddle tug-, believed to be the last of its kind in the world, was skippered
by Scott Newhall, editor of the San Francisco Chronicle, on the trip from England.
U.S. Is Wary
On Arms Aid
To Cambodia
By Richard Halloran
WASHINGTON, March 25 INTO .
—The State Department said yes-
terday that the United States
would face the question of mili-
tary assistance to the new gov-
ernment of Cambodia “if and when
it arises.”
A departmental spokesman, Carl
Bartch, told a news briefing that
Washington had received no in-
dication whether the government
of Premier Lon Nol wanted mili-
tary help from the United States.
Secretary of State W illiam p.
Rogers said at a news conference
Monday that “we don't anticipate
that any request will be made."
Mr. Bartch explained yesterday
that the secretary had not pre-
judged a response to such a request
nor had he intended to prevent a
Cambodian request.
The administration's public pos-
ture on the Cambodian situation
has been not to become involved
while awaiting developments. The
United States has continued dip-
lomatic relations with the gov-
ernment named after the coup
d'etat last week. Officials have
confined themselves to bland state-
ments of respect for Cambodia's
neutrality and sovereignty.
Similar to Indonesia
Al Least 6 Times, Sources Sav
Saigon Jets and Artillery Aid
Cambodians A gainst Viet Cong
2 Officers Cite
Pressure for
6 Body Counts 9
Say Commanders
Want High Kill List
By Terence Smith
SAIGON, March 25 (NYT>. — ied that the areas inside Cambodia
South Vietnamese Air Force Jets 1 be "softened up" by advance air
have struck inside Cambodia at! strikes on suspected enemy posi-
Jeast twice in the last week, in sup- ! lions and bunkers,
port of Cambodian Army opera- 1 The sources said the Cambodians
tions against the Viet Cong, sources , have proposed that napalm be used
said today. :as well as teams of helicopter gun-
Last Friday, and again on Mon- ships,
day, Vietnamese A-l jet fighter- ( It Is not known if the South Viet-
bombers struck suspected enemy, namese command has agreed to
positions a few miles Inside Cam- [ participate in such large-scale Joint
bodla across from An Phu district operations or proride anything
in Chau Due Province. j beyond air strikes and artillery.
Both strikes were requested
by
A spokesman for the South Viet-
the Cambodian area commanders ;D&nese Army said today that the
Israel Claims 4
Egypt MiGs
{.Con tinned from Page 1)
inland, from five to 15 miles, and
distances beyond 15 miles.
An earlier series of Israeli bomb-
ing attacks launched soon after
President Gamal Abdel Nasser of
the United Arab Republic declared
his war of attrition against Israel
presumably cleared the first sector
of military sites.
Twice a Day
Israeli aircraft are now attack-
ing the other two areas, with raids
twice daily against the 5- to- 15-
mile zone and once or twice weekly
attack up to 80 miles inland.
Military officials continue to
avoid answering newsmen's ques-
tions about the reported installa-
tion of the SAM-3 missiles and
whether Israel has "solved" them
as they apparently did the SAM-2
version.
There have been neither reports
nor rumors that the new missile
have been fired, nor are there any
indications that they have been
hit by Israeli bombers. An officer
said today that he believed thev
had never been fired in combat.
The newer models are consider-
ed to be more mobile than the
SAM-2*, capable of being launch-
ed from specially built trucks, and
designed to hit aircraft under Mi?
2,009- foot ceiling of the SAM-2s.
This approach is strikingly sim-
ilar to that adopted after the
abortive coup in 1965 In Indonesia
that led to the downfall of Pres-
ident Sukarno.
Now, as then, officials here have
indicated that they do not want
to say or do anything that might
upset a possibly advantageous
turn. Equally, they want to avoid
putting the United States at a
disadvantage should an unforeseen
downturn occur.
The assistant secretary of state
for East Asian and Pacific affairs.
Marshal Green, has reportedly
been Influential in deciding this
approach. Mr. Green was ambas-
sador to Indonesia during the 1965
coup and after, He has also been
an advocate of a reduced Amer-
ican military engagement in Asia,
a view incorporated into the Nixon
doctrine of encouraging Asian
countries to take greater responsi-
bility for their defense.
The administration has also been
cautious about Cambodia In an
effort to preclude more dissent
from anti-war critics, especially
in Congress. Almost a s soon as
trouble began developing in Cam-
bodia. critics of American actions
In Vietnam and Laos warned
against involvement in Cambodia.
Ex-Deputv Chau
To Get Hearing
On New Trial
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SAIGON. March 25 lUFIl — 1 The
South Vietnamese Supreme Court
decided today that convicted Na-
tional Assembly Deputy Tran Ngoc
Chau. 46. may have been tried un-
constitutionally before a military
court.
The nation’s highest civilian
court agreed to bear his request
for a new trial on April 28.
The ruling was the result of the
latest in a series of legal maneu-
vers made by Mr. Chau’s lawyers
in an effort to free the deputy who
is serving ten years at hard labor
for alleged Communist activities.
His lawyers are trying to take the
case through the civilian courts.
Mr. Chau was sentenced to prison
March 5 in a highly- publicized
case that brought charges of sup-
pression against the government of
President Nguyen Van Tbieu.
A special Senate committee Mon-
day asked the court to reconsider
Mr. Chau's conviction based on a
number of irregularities connected
with the case. Mr. Thieu ordered
a military court trial for Mr. Chau
last February’ after 102 of 135 mem-
bers of the Lower House signed a
petition stating that the govern-
ment should either clear or convict
the deputy. Some deputies claimed
their signatures were forged.
in personal meetings with the An
Phu district chief. Lt. Col. Truong
Dfnh Chat. The meetings took
place in a mud-walled outpost on
the Cambodian side of the border.
In addition. South Vietnamese
artillery batteries have provided
close combat support to Cambodian
units on at least four occasions
since March 16, the sources said.
Over 100 rounds have been fired
in Cambodia by the howitzers based
in An Phu district during that
time.
The air strikes represent the
most dramatic example of cress-
border cooperation between South
Vietnamese and Cambodian troops
since the overthrow last week of
Prince Norodom Sihanouk as Cam-
bodian chief of state.
During the last ten days, Cam-
bodian Army troops have conducted
a battalion-size sweep operation on
their side of the border in an ap-
parent effort to drive the North
Vietnamese and Viet Cong units
across the South Vietnamese j
border.
Communist troops have long used
the eastern provinces of Cambodia!
as sanctuaries and supply bases
for their operations inside South
Vietnam. The new government In
Phnom Penh has pledged to expel
the North Vietnamese and Vjet
Cong forces on Cambodian terri-
tory.
According to reliable sources,
UJ3, involvement in the cross-
border cooperation against the Viet
LONG BENH.. Vietnam, March
25 i UP I '.—Two young American
Infantry officers told an Army
court today they were under pres-
sure trom their commanders to
report killing as many Communist
soldiers as possible.
A civilian defense attorney called
the officers to the stand in an effort
to prove that Army “body count”
policies forced Lt. James B. Duffy,
22. to order the execution of a
Vietnamese man seized by his
platoon in September 40 miles
southwest of Saigon.
Lt. Duffy is accused of premedi-
tated murder in the shooting Sept.
of Do Van Men, whom other
witnesses described as a South
Vietnamese Army deserter detained
by Lt. Duffy’s soldiers in a Viet
Cong area.
Attorney Henry Rothblatt called
Lt. John D. Kruger. 23. and Lt.
Ralph C. Kreuger Jr- 25, fellow-
officers with Lt. Duffy in the 3d
Brigade of the 9th U.S. Infantry
Division. Both testified that "body
counts" were a gauge for advance-
ment in the Army.
“Your officer efficiency report
is based on how many enemy are
killed," Lt. Kreuger told the court.
'It’s that simple.' 1
He said the pressure for body
counts came from "higher levels
outside the company.”
The other officer testifying. Lt.
As US. Denies Drug Link
3 Mare Charged With Murder
In Alleged My Lai Massacre
ATLANTA. Ga., March 25 (APt.ied potential violence by American
—Three more Army enlisted men
were charged with murder today
in connection with the alleged 1968
massacre at My Lai in South Viet-
nam.
An Army spokesman at Fort Mc-
Pherson. headquarters for the 3d
Army. Identified the three as. Spec.
4 William F. Doherty, 21. of Read-
ville. Mass.. CpI. Kenneth Schiel
22, of Swarts Creek, Mich- and
JSpec. 4 Robert W. Tsouvas. 20. of
San Jose, Calif.
The spokesman said the three
men have each been charged with
one count of murder.
The three enllisted men were
charged with "murder In violation
of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice,” but there was no indica-
tion that they were accused of more
than one slaying.
AH three are now at Fort Mc-
Pherson, near Atlanta, where the;
will undergo pre-trial investigations
to determine whether they face
courts-martial.
Spec. Doherty, a high school
graduate, was a private first class
at the time of the alleged mas-
sacre.
CpL Schiel, also a high school
graduate, was a sergeant and a
squad leader.
Spec. Tsouvas had only a tenth-
grade education. He was a private
first class.
All three of the men testified
before the investigation conducted
soldiers la Vietnam.” a subconv
mittee statement said.
In prepared testimony today. Dr
Laveme said the My Lai investi-
gation "has not been completed'’
because "it has neglected to in-
vestigate the medical evidence ar.d
its associated Inferences in relation
to the alleged massacres.''
2 Helicopters
Collide, 4 Die
In Vietnam
Kruger, said that in his battalion by Lt. Gen. William Peers to de-
local commanders have already
been authorized to provide artillery
support and exchange intelligence
information with the Cambodians
but so far not to commit troops.
Such a decision would presumably
have to be made by tlie Vietna-
mese joint general staff.
In general, the South Vietnamese
are anxious to exploit , the current
differences between ' the Cam-
bodians and the Viet Cong and to
do everything possible to assist the
Cambodians In their military opera-
tions.
headquarters a chart was kept on
Communist body counts. He said
there were columns for enemy
killed in action, enemy killed by air
strikes, Viet Cong political workers
killed by boody traps, but no
columns for UJ5. casualties or
prisoners taken.
"I get the impression that all
the high officers want is body
counts.” be said.
Capt. Dennis L. Muehlstedt, 26,
testified that the major who was
Lt. Duffy's battalion executive of-
ficer at the time of the slaying was
particularly interested in body
counts. He said units falling to
produce high counts were kept out-
in the field longer.
Capt. Charles L. Stewart, 25. said
the major's policy was "the more
the better” on body counts. When
a member of the court asked
whether headquarters was more
pleased with a 14 body count and
one prisoner, or 15 bodies, Capt.
Stewart replied: "Fifteen bodies.
Prisoners just don't count.'
Hanoi and Viet Cong Recall
All Their Envovs in Cambodia
By Henry Kamm
PHNOM PENH. March 25
fNYTL— North Vietnam and the
Viet Cong advised Cambodia to-
day that they were recalling all
diplomats from Cambodia. The
move, regarded as just short of
a rupture in diplomatic relations,
was disclosed in an interview by
the iFrst Deputy Premier, Prince
Sisowath Sirik Matak.
The prince, who together with
the Premier. Lt. Gen. Lon Nol,
brought about last week's ouster of
Prince Norodom Sihanouk as chief
or state, said the embassies inform-
ed Cambodia by official notes this
Cong has been limited to the use morning that they were withdraw-
of spotter aircraft. No American tog all but their janitors from
troops have been involved in the! Phnom Penh.
operations no r h&s American ar-
tillery been used.
French-speaking UJ3. advisers,
however, have participated in sev-
eral of the meetings that have
been held between Cambodians and
South Vietnamese officials on the
Cambodian side of the border, the
informants said.
At these meetings, the Cam-
bodians reportedly have proposed
that Cambodian and South Vietna-
mese troops cooperate in a large-
scale sweep of the known Viet
Cong base areas Just across the
border. The Cambodian com-
manders have suggested that the
South Vietnamese troops operate
as a blocking force to trap the Viet
Cong as they escape across the
border.
At no time, have they asked the
South Vietnamese troops to operate
on the Cambodian side of the
border.
They have, however, jnecommend-
U.S. Denies Plan
To Cut Vietnam
Forces by Half
WASHINGTON. March 2fi CAPl.
— The White House described to-
day as "Dot correct” a report that
next year's defense budget is bas-
ed on an assumption that the U.S.
troop total in South Vietnam w-i 1
drop to 225.000 by mid-1071.
In a dispatch from Washington
yesterday. The New York Times
reported that the defense budget for
the 1971 fiscal year starting July 1
was built around a projection that
the troop level could be no t. to
225.000 from a current tofctf of
about 454.000.
Press Secretary Ron Ziegler said
no decision has been made by
Fresirienr Nixon on further zroop
withdrawals, and declared: The
225.000 figure is not correct. ’
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Paris (X8eK Deliveries mode
TeL: MASeadet 33-64. Cl nominal price.
[Foreign diplomats said they had
been advised by the government
that it has closed SlhanoukviUe to
ships bearing arms for Commun-
ist forces. United Press Interna-
tional reported. The diplomatic-
sources said they had received this
notice during a briefing by the
Cambodian Foreign Office.!
Meanwhile, the ambassadors
from Communist countries were
reported to be meeting at the
Polish Embassy. Polish diplomats
said that they would not close
their mission here.
Embassies Were Sacked
Both the North Vietnamese and
the Viet Cong Embassies were sack-
ed in the course of well- organized
demonstrations two weeks ago to
protest against the presence of
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong
troops In Cambodia.
Prince Sirik Matak said he re-
gretted deeply the closing of the
two embassies.
The development was seen
casting a dark shadow aver Cam-
bodia's future, because it disrupted
direct negotiations with the two
Communist powers for the with-
drawal of their troops. Observers
now saw little chance of any ac-
commodation between the Viet-
namese Communists and post-
Sihanouk Cambodia.
Prince Sihanouk had extended
recognition to the Provisional
Revolutionary Government of
South Vietnam last year and Al-
lowed tbe Viet Cong to raise Its
delegation here to embassy statU3.
May Appeal to UN
Nevertheless, Prince Sirik Matak
said the government would try by
all peaceful means to secure the
evacuation of Cambodian territory
by Vietnamese troops. He said that
If last week’s request to Britain
and the Soviet Union, as co-chair-
men of the Geneva conference of
1954, to reactivate the Interna-
tional Control Commission failed
to produce this evacuation. Cam-
bodia would appeal to the United
Nations.
But the prince said he did not
know what specific measures the
government might ask the UN to
take. Asked what Cambodia
could do In the event that neither
the application of the Geneva ac-
cords nor the UN succeeded In
clearing the Vietnamese from
Cambodia^. Prince- Sirik. Matak- re-
plied calmly: ’T am sorry I can-
not reply to this question."
Cambodia is heavily outmatched
by enemy military power, both in
men and in materiel. Cambodian
military sources said they did not
know how many Communist troops
were in Cambodia but said that in
any event there were more North
Vietnamese and Viet Cong In this
country than there are Cambodian
troops.
The Cambodian armed forces
are thought to number between
35.000 and 33.0CQ men.
tenninae whether there had been
a cover-up of tbe massacre.
CpL Schiel has been decorated
with the Silver Star and Spec.
Tsouvas tbe Purple Heart. Spec.
Doherty wears several decorations.
Including a parachutist badge and
a Vietnam Campaign Medal
CpI. Schiel also has the Bronze
Star Medal, the Purple Heart, tbe
Vietnam Sendee Medal and a para-
chutist and combat Infantryman
badge In addition to his Silver
Star.
Prince’s Photos Removed
SENRI HILLS. Japan, March 25
(Reuters’! .—Photographs of deposed
head of state Prince Norodom
Sihanouk at the Cambodian pavil-
ion at Expo 70 have been replaced
by photos of Cambodian dancing
girls and a picturesque temple.
No Drug Link
WASHINGTON. March 25 (T7PII.
— The Defense Department said to-
day there was no evidence that
soldiers at My Lai had been smok-
ing marijuana before the alleged
massacre March 16, 1968.
The Pentagon statement was In
response to testimony yesterday
of former Sgt. Charles West. 23. of
Chicago, before a Senate sub-
committee.
A Pentagon spokesman said.
“Intensive Interviews . . . developed
no evidence that any member of
the units engaged in the Song My
[My Lai] operation was under the
influence of marijuana or narcot-
ics."
In testimony today before the
Senate subcommittee, a psy-
chiatrist who has studied the ef-
fects of marijuana on Vietnam
servicemen said the alleged mas-
sacre might have been a “medi-
cally and legally involuntary” act
of drug-induced behavior.
Dr. Albert Laveme, senior psy-
chiatrist at Bellevue Psychiatric
Hospital. New York, called for a
medical investigation of the alleg-
ed massacre.
Dr. Laveme, testifying before the
Senate juvenile delinquency sub-
committee. said he had studied 120
Vietnam veterans during the last
18 months in a survey of the ef-
fects of marijuana on troops in
Vietnam.
The subcommittee said Dr. La-
veme had also testified in a closed
session last year, before the alleged
My Lai massacre was known to
him or public? disclosed.
“Dr. La r erne’s testimony predict-
8AIGON, March 25 (UPD .-Two
UjS, Marine helicopter gunshlps
collided today to the air fire miles
southwest of Da Nang. kflUng all
four aboard the aircraft, military
spokesmen said.
UH. B-52 bombers flew strikes
against Communist supply lines In
the northern quarter of South
Vietnam and along the Ho Chi
Minh supply trail In Laos, the
spokesmen said.
Two raids were flown today in
the A Shaw Valley about ten miles
east of Laos and 375 miles north-
east of Saigon, they said.
Air Operations in Laos
Air Force. Navy and Marine
Corps fighter-bombers also flew
combat support missions” inside
Laos In support of government
troops fighting North Vietnamese
and Pariiet Lao forces, the spokes-
men said.
The spokesmen said South Viet-
namese troops killed 64 Communist
soldiers in a clash In the Mekong
Delta yesterday 60 miles west-
southwest of Saigon.
The government force, backed
by air strikes, had eight dead and
40 wounded, he Raid.
U.K. Seeks Soviet
Aid on Cambodia
LONDON. March 25 (API.— Brit-
ain today directed its envoy m
Moscow to seek Soviet aid in en-
suring the withdrawal of North
Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops
from Cambodia.
Government officials said Am-
bassador Sir Duncan Wilson was
told to suggest reactivation of the
three-nation International Control
Commission in Cambodia to super-
vise the withdrawal of the Com-
munist forces.
The British more was made at
the request of the Cambodian gov-
ernment.
The ICC. made up of delegates
from Canada. India and Poland,
was disbanded some time ago when
Prince Norodom Sihanouk, ousted
last week as chief of state, said
his country was unable to pay Jte
share of maintaining it
The Cambodian request was seat
to Britain and the Soviet Union
to their capacity as co-chairmen
of the Geneva conference.
Laotian Troops Retake Hill
From Reds Near U.S. Facility
VIENTIANE, Laos.
By T. D. Allman
March 25, leader, last week to the prime min-
(WP i .—Laotian government troops
ba~e reoccupied a hill position
about two miles north of Long
Cheng, which guards a vital UJ5.-
Laotian base and also protects the
site of an American telecommuni-
cations relay station.
Official sources said today that
the position, which North Viet-
namese troops seized in fighting
yesterday, was reoccupied following
heavy UJS. air strikes. Recent rains
here cleared the dry season dust,
providing visibility of three to five
miles.
The sources said that the recent
rains had Increased the effec-
tiveness of UB. airstrikes to North-
east Laos, where about five North
Vietnamese battalions are men-
acing Long Cheng, the last major
American-Laotian stronghold. The
sources said that a nearby position
which serves as a beacon for UJS.
bombers in Northeast Laos and a
relay station for U.S. and Laotian
military communications, was not
put out of operation by yesterday's
attack.
Several Americans operate the
relay station. However, official
sources said today that, if tbe
Americans had been evacuated,
communication relay could con-
tinue through unmanned automatic
equipment so long as the equip-
ment was not destroyed and could
be maintained periodically.
Meanwhile, the Laotian cabinet
voted today to postpone a decision
on a five-point Fathet Lao peace
plan by passing it to the National
Assembly for consideration.
Government sources said tonight
that the Permanent committee of
the National Assembly would con-
sider the Patbet Lao peace plan
and a letter sent from Prince
Souvaaouvongt the Pathet Lao
ister, Prince Souvanna Fbouma,
and return a written reply within
ten days.
Communists Attack
Early today, two battalions of
North Vietnamese troops attacked
another government position, near
a village five mules north of Long
Cheng.
The sources said that govern-
ment troops withstood the attack
until dawn when Ujs. aircraft in-
tervened and the Communists were
forced to withdraw. American gun-
ships. flying from bases In Thai-
land, the sources said, also strafed
Communist positions around Long
Cheng last night and today. Mili-
tary sources said that they were
optimistic that Long Cheng, ex-
posed to Communist attack since
the fall of Sam Thong last week,
could be defended against Com-
munist attack. About 800 Thai
soldiers have been flown into Long
Cheng to participate in its de-
fense.
Reliable sources said that the
Thai troops would be used to man
artillery positions defending Long
Cheng. But U.S. sources denied
press reports that the troops were
led by American Green Berets.
Increase Reported
Other reliable sources, however,
have reported an increase in Amer-
ican personnel at long Cheng.
The Americans are directing tbe
defense of the valley's CIA base,
which Is also the headquarters for
Gen. Vang Pao’s clandestine army.
The sources said that they were
optimistic that Long Cheng could
be held because of its ideal defen-
sive position in a ring of high,
government-held hills. Their con-
fidence was due to the difficulty the
Communists would have in moving
In more troop* over rough terrain
and under Intensive U.S. bombing.
U.S. Blast Postponed
FAHUTE MESA. Nev., March 35
f API . — High winds forced post- -
ponement today of tbe United ■*
States' SOOth announced nuclear
blast, a bomb more powerful than .
hydrogen bombs previously explod-
ed here at the Nevada test site. The ’
Atomic Energy Commission said tbe
shot, code-named Project Handley,
has been rescheduled for tom or- *-■
row.
Weather
AMSTERDAM..
ANKARA.
ATHENS.
BEIRUT
BELGRADE.
BERLIN
BRUSSELS
BUDAPEST......
CAIRO
CASABLANCA..
COPENHAGEN.
COSTA O' SOL.
DUBLIN,
EDINBURGH...
FLORENCE
FRANKJTRT...
GENEVA
HELSINKI
ISTANBUL
LAS PALMAS...
LISBON
LONDON
MADRID
MILAN
MONTREAL.
MOSCOW _
MUNICH 10
NEW XORK
NICE.™...
OSLO...,
CAfitS
PRAGUE.
ROME
SOFIA...
STOCKHOLM..
TEL AVIV..-.,..
TONIS
VENICE.
VIENNA
WARSAW
WASHINGTON
ZURICH
fW, Canadian
©
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fi
41
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IB
64
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64
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2
36
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IS
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22
72
Partly cloudy
17'
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I
34
Very cloudy
17
63
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' 7
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7
45
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13
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16
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Sunny
20
68
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13
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41
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52
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0
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111;,
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THE
AMERICAN CHURCH
IN PARKS
MAUNDY THURSDAY
SERVICE
March 26-5 p.m.
Sacrament of Holy commanWP
and
Office of Tenetaae
'V--
G00D FRIDAY ;
12 noen to 3 pAL
UNION 3-HOUR SEBVKft.-
«im meditation* • -on tta* !r*£2]
WORDS irom me CROSS br
speailAg deify ot Peru. ANOLIC^*
PROTESTANT & -ROMAN CATBpWgrf
All bulled. Come and ** -r**?
during 7 Iwnra. -
AMERICAN CATHEDRAL
’ 23 'Avenoa George VV . ..
GctW .V jl»‘ K« Li ■
■*. *
INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1970
Page 3
%
Vi.
'u
inflo ttoncay Burst Feared
aimed U.S. Budget Surplus
Wiped Out by Postal Strike
By Murray Seeger
WaSSINGTOW, Maxell 36.— rent spell of
W^vZwent Nixon’S shaky plans for
•/.“ 1^- ^ ^rl^toflatlcmaiy bndget surplus
fi * 5al Jew havebeen
Vi
oat by the postal strike.
-■' * which is the keystone
[ *Cq
80. I* 71 *
yjo. instead, qualified con-
i' ) ™ experts foresee ft deficit
<IC|fft nSTBoft to H bflEon and pos-
abJDtoa
'pfni
would -mean stdmula-
tion ^ econoiny toward a new
JjgationM? burst before the
cut-
's ri
: r* £*
*■»**.
' •’W |M J
L - l>
1 1
Hudson Is Ruled
f Jie Discoverer
Of Coney Island
;' "J.H-SW YOBS; March 35
;• pjpn.— The Coney Island
;^ 7n , mh er of Commerce has en-
“dacMd a Hutch claim that the
jjjjgoverer of Coney Is land was
4 ■gsas Hudson, and: not
..^'-'(Sanrad di Verrazano as
■**
'Pro
■ -^w-
^
••— (J .
'•nr >c* ‘‘
'Mi
k- Soeli
*1 u
claimed by the Italians.
- -flu; chamber postponed last
September the 360th acniyer-
■ jyy observance of Hudson's
jbndiag on Coney when the
- Saltan Historical Society of
America submitted documents
-proving Verrazano sailed the
waten off Coney Island in
KM, although there was no
proof that he or his crew went
sduae. .
The chamber reported that
tbe Netherlands Chamber
ol commerce in Manhattan
‘ jus come up with docu-
mads proving that Hudson was
the flret white man to set foot
an tbe shares of Coney Island
Jn-lfflB.-. .
Nixon Seeks
Stiff er Law
•On Bombings
5t-
>{ .■
(Continued bom Page 1)
in their efforts to -combat
multiplying number of . acts of
. - Jrban ten-ar he said.
White House Press secretary Ron
~ "Kegler reported that in tbe fiscal
. war 1969 there were 46 bomb
; 'J-^hreais against federal buildings
• gJfSovbed by the General Services
‘ -^i^H^istratioix. So far in fiscal
‘ -^Ifllihere have been 164 threats.
V. rXla fiscal 1969 arson and bomb-
;;; n fag incidents at federal buildings
"Jotaled 13, compared with 14 so
’'■•pt in fiscal 1970, Mr. Ziegler said.
,; ' : Epir. Kleindienst said there was
'i» evidence of any "conscious, 1
• precise or clear conspiracy in the
■ — recent bombings, but he said it is
I fMEpoGS&le to pick up a piece of paper
... , v *m' almost any college campus
instructions on how to make
. President's Bequests
- - 'She President urged Congress to
lengthen present federal laws in
• *|taa ways:
• m ^\ ;• impose a penalty of ten years
:fc prison or a fine of $10,000 on
•• •' anyone involved in the transport
explosives for unlawful use. The
^.present penalty is one year in prl-
- an and SLOW fine.
• Dpoble the penalty if anyone
\\ f UK*'**"* as the result of such
“ ' 1 transport of explosives and provide
i » Oft- death penalty' if there Is a
. „ lU -, v kt&Uty.
•-Raise .penalties for bomh
1 , threats from one year in prison
‘ ' . to a maximum of’ five years or
• tSfloa or both.
• Include incendiary devices in
V* "category: of explosives.
' ' • Make it a federal crime to use
explodes vgainst a federal build-
tog or vehicle and make possession
• • of any ea^csive in such a building
■ a federal crime.
• Mak e It a federal crime to use
■ optafiveg to damage any building
- »• to® 3 for business purposes by any
. PWtm or firm engaged in inter-
commerce.
. t Ukfea it a crime to possess
^waives with the intent to dam-
|W_XectaraI property used in Its
by a person engaged in
commerce.
inflation has been
broken. . .
Most officials concede that the
postal workers,- led by the National
Association of Letter Carriers, have
made their case for a sizable wage
increase.
Raises for Others.
Granting the 750,000 workers a
raise almost certainly will mean
that the other 3.7 million federal
workers and military personnel
also' wUl get pay increase no later
th g r i July L
The President's budget Included
$175 mill io n to give postal workers
a 5.4 percent increase effective last
Jan. 1, on the condition that Con-
gress also approve a postal reform
bilL'
Another raise of 5.75 percent for
all employees was scheduled for
July 1 under tbe law e»mng for
federal salaries to .reach "com-
parability'’ with private payrolls.
Mr. Nixon asked, however, that
the July pay raise be postponed for
six months "because the need to
control and ennfadn the Inflationary
spiral is of paramount Importance
at this time.*' The delay, was count-
ed on to save $L4 billion in the
budget, enough to produce the
planned surplus.
Staff experts of the Joint Ccm-
-essional Committee on Internal
Revenue Taxation have told Bep.
Wilbur D. -Mills, D., Ark., committee
chairman, that the surplus would
not materialize. They estimated
that the deficit could reach. $7 bil-
lion or $8 billion because so many
of. the assumptions, on which the
budget, was based were unlikely to
prove valid.
How S orpins Helps
.■When the federal budget
surplus, the government becomes a
supplier of money to the economy
instead of a consumer.
The surplus was considered
highly important to encourage the
Federal Reserve System to loosen
controls on money supply, an ac-
tion that mi ght lower interest
rates.
If the budget shifts sharply to a
deficit after a surplus last year
and a near balance this June 30,
the government again, would be-
come an inflationary farce in tbe
econoiny. The government would
be forced to borrow to cover its
deficits, absorbing much of the new
money created by the Federal
Reserve and pushing interest rates
higher again.
© Lot Angeles Times
25% Rate Cut Set
For Swiss-U.S. Calls
BERN, March 25 CUFD.— The
cost of telephone and telex calls
from. Switzerland to the United
States and Canada is to be reduced
by almost 25 percent on Tuesday,
the Swiss Fast Office said today.
After the reduction, made pos-
sible by a new transatlantic cable
connection through Rome and
Spain, a three-minute call will coat
$6.97.
United Press international.
BOISE BURNOUT — Three Idaho farmers watch as two million pounds of gasoline-
soaked potatoes go up in flames, near Boise, in a National Farmers Organization
protest against the low prices now being offered for this year’s crop of potatoes.
School Desegregation Dispute in Senate
Stennis Delays Vote on Education Bill
Sen.
By Spencer Rich
■WASHINGTON, March 35 (WP).
—Sen. John Stennis plunged the
Senate into a new dispute over
school segregation yesterday, delay-
ing final congressional action on
a $24.6 billion bill to aid. elementary
unH secondary education.
Tbe Mississippi Democrat object-
ed to changes made by a . House-
Senate conference committee in
school desegregation language add-
ed to the bin earlier by
Stennis.
The earlier language required
the Depa rtm ent of Health, Educa-
tion and welfare to apply anti-
segregation guidelines with, equal
vigor in the North and South, re-
gardless of whether the segregation
resulted from local government
policies or was merely the result
of Ttmuring patterns.
Its effect would have been to
force HEW to withhold school
funds In Northern eommimitias
that failed to end segregation
caused by housing patterns. Sen.
Stennis argued that focusing en-
forcement on areas of deliberate,
governmental segregation policies
that only the South would
be subject to enforcement, al-
though many Northern cities had
more racial separation' than in the
South.
HEW Guidelines
The language adopted by the
conference said, in effect, that
HEW guidelines should be applied
to bar segregation only where the
courts had found it to be i lle g al
Since school segregation so far has
been held dlegal only where it is
the result of deliberate policies (de
Atlanta Union
Refuses Offer
^ WLANta, March 25 (API.—
gang city employees— fired by
-35* Sua ‘ Mansell last Friday—
to continue their strike
support of pay demands far
workers.
L^bout 1.500 remain on strike. The
^said that the vote to continue
*, which , is now in its ninth
overwhelming.
Massefi. fired the workers
they had gone on strike.
°ty government offered wage
tium the strikers
re-instatement
prejudice, but also without
it of lost wages. It was this
Wat the strikers rejected.
iRCI)l)y
PERFUMES
JJB — BAGS — GIFTS
HUE AUBER, PARIS
Vf
. i • y
■ i m v ||
ling'* export' Drscovyr_
IfciBMc me* n-oi
United Press International.
WORDS OF SILENCE— Yippie leaders Jerry Rubin (left)
and Abbie Hoffman, symbolically gagged, and Mrs.
Timothy Leary, at their news conference in New York.
Rubin and Hoffman of Chicago 7
Stage Silent Press Conference
NEW YORK, Mtoch 25 (AP).—
Jerry Rubin and Abbie Hoffman,
two of the Chicago Seven defen-
dants and leaders of the Youth
International party, or Yippies,
called a news conference yester-
day, but neither said a word.
Pieces of white cloth covered
their faces and a heavy rope held
t.ham securely to their chairs.
Apparently they were protesting
their treatment during their trial
in Chicago, where they were con-
victed on charges of crossing state
Kna to incite riots, as well as
their current status.
The defendants are not allowed
to leave the United States pend-
ing their appeals.
However, Rosemary Leary, wife
of Timothy Leary, and Rubin's
wife Nancy, were present and did
tile talking.
Mrs. Rubin said that she and
Hoffman’s wife, Anita, were leav-
ing for Europe today. They wUl
visit Sweden, France, England a_^d
Germany.
She said the first stop would
be Stockholm, where they will meet
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong
representatives.
Conviction Upheld
SPRINGFIELD, IIL, March 25
(UPI).— -The Illinois Supreme
Court upheld yesterday Mr. Hoff-
man's conviction for r e s isting ar-
rest and displaying a vulgar word
on his forehead during the IS6S
Democratic National Convention.
On Aug. 28. 1968, H offman , 33,
was arrested in a Loop restamant
on the complaint of an raudemafl-
ed woman that he had an obscene
four-letter word painted on his
forehead.
jure segregation) and not where it
is the result of housing patterns
alone fde facto segregation), the
conference’s language would apply
primarily to Southern areas with
a history of government-enforced
segregation.
Senate Democratic Leader Mike
Mansfield yesterday tiled to get
agreement for a vote next Wednes-
day on the education bill, although
he said he would have preferred an
earlier vote.
Southern opponents of the meas-
ure agreed to a Wednesday vote
but final decision was delayed by
getting snarled in the controversy
over the nomination of Judge G.
Harrold Carswell to the Supreme
Court.
Instead of permitting a vote on
the conference report yesterday.
Sen. Stennis and other Southerners
argued against it at length, contend-
ing it simply wiped out the earlier
Stennis amendment and laid en-
forcement once again on the head
of the South only.
Sen. Hugh . Scott. R-. Pa., and
Sen. Peter Dominick. TL, Colo., said
they believe the conference agree*
meat is in accord with President
Nixon's message on desegregation
yesterday, which said that de facto
segregation should not be a cause
for federal action. Sea Scott said
the courts have not yet ruled that
de facto segregation is Illegal and
until they do, “we don't know
bow" to proceed in the North.
White House
Would Sift
Protesters
Bights Unit Plans
Challenge in Court
By Carol Honsa
WASHINGTON, March 25 fWF).
—Protesters planning White House
flaranmgfci-n- Hnnw WOUld have to Sub-
mit detailed advance information
about their put protest activities,
as well as any previous arrests and
convictions, under proposed new
federal government procedures.
The questions about protesters are
proposed as part of a 33-item ques-
tionnaire that protest groups would
have to submit to the National
Park Service 15 days before plan-
ned demonstrations near the White
House.
The American Civil Liberties
Union, which made the proposed
questionnaire public yesterday, said
It will challenge it in court Monday
on constitutional grounds.
•ChUT on Bights
Florence Robin, director of the
Washington ACLU chapter, said
the questionnaire would be "an In-
vasion of privacy” which "casts a
r»hni on people's right to as-
semble."
She said the questions were drawn
up by the Justice Department, al-
though they were formally pro-
posed eight days ago by the Na-
tional Park Service, which has
Jurisdiction over the White House
sidewalks.
Park Service and Justice Depart-
ment officials reached late last
wight were unable to confirm tbe
proposed new regulations.
Mrs. Robin said the question-
naire was prepared for submission
to the UJ5. Court of Appeals here,
which last year upheld a lower-
court ruling against restrictions cm
picketing and demonstrations
around the White House In a suit
brought by the ACLU.
According to Mrs. Robin, the
court said the government has a
right to advance notice of demon-
strations near the White House. It
asked the Pork Service to draw up
a notice form that demonstrators
would submit 15 days before their
planned protest.
After Nixon Statement
Busing Pressure on Southern Cities Eased
By Peter Milius
WASHINGTON, March 35 CWP).
— Southern cities like Mobile, Ala.,
and Charlotte, N.C„ vm no longer
he under federal pressure to bus
pupils out of all-black schools
located in all-black neighborhoods.
They will have to desegregate
the teaching staffs in each of their
schools— but so will Northern cities
uicft Chicago, probably to the con-
sternation of teachers’ unions.
Finally, though cities need not
bus, whether South or North,
wfithpr may they “discriminate
with respect to the quality of
facilities or the quality of educa-
tion delivered" in their all-black
schools.
These are the three main thrusts
of President Nixon's statement yes-
terday on school desegregation, an
outline of a new federal strategy.
The statement dealt mainly with
urban segregation. Most of the law
on the subject has grown out of
rural examples in the South. Many
problems stem from the effort to
apply this rural law to urban cir-
cumstances. It was into this partial
legal vacuum that the President
stepped.
South Always Bused
m the rural South, most chil-
dren have always ■ been bused to
school, and most blacks and whites
live interspersed, with few residen-
tial concentrations. Rural school
districts were easy to desegregate.
Judges ordered att endanc e zones
drawn and bus routes changed to
wipe out all “vestiges" of the old
dual school system.
In the urban South, to which
civil rights lawyers have increas-
ingly turned, ft has not been that
simple. The old legal segregation
has been reinforced by residential
patterns, creating dense black
neighborhoods little different from
those found in cities in the North.
Wiping out all vestiges of tbe old
system ho* meant busing, some-
times In districts that have few
buses or none at ah. Some judges
have ordered busing, while others
have backed down in the face of
social geography. The Supreme
Court has not spoken directly on
this issue.
Mr. Nixon stated clearly that un-
less the Supreme Court says other-
wise. the government will not apply
pressure to bus in these urban
cases.
Neighborhood School Key
"The neighborhood school will be
deemed the most appropriate base,"
he said, and “transportation of
pupils beyond normal geographic
school zones for the purpose of
achieving racial balance wUl not
be required."
Southern cities . e still under
the obligation to take such steps
they can to bring about de-
segregation, such as redrawing
boundaries or building new schools
on white-black borderlines. North-
ern cities are under a similar
obligation. The President put the
two on much the same footing.
The Supreme Court said some
time ago that school districts must
desegregate their teaching staffs,
so that the black-white ratio in
each school is about tbe same as
In the school district as a whole.
Though he balked at the pros-
pect of moving pupils around, the
President served notice that he bad
do such reservations about teacher
transfers.
Contrary to Contracts
Teachers* unions often do. Such
transfer orders run counter to the
q-jag ea in many contracts allowing
senior teachers to choose the
refopoi* ha which they teach. La
practice, white teachers have used
such dame s to transfer from black
to white schools. This was one of
the obstacles that cropped up when
the Justice Department put faculty
desegregation pressure on Chi-
cago last summer in a case still
in negotiation. Similar pressure has
brought protests in Memphis and
other cities.
The President's promised em-
phasis on making black and white
schools equal in the cities ?lso
takes him into touchy territory.'
In the Hobson vs. Hansen case
here three years ago. Judge J.
Skelly Wright found wholesale in-
equalities in such things as expen-
ditures per pupil between white
and black schools. There have been
rimflar findings . elsewhere.
There is already a federal rule
against such disparities. The Of-
fice of Education said recently
that it would begin enforcing
the rule. But Congress deferred
the office's enforcement power in
the pending elementary and sec-
ondary education bill.
In his education message several
weeks ago, Mr. Nixon said the com-
pensatory education programs for
the poor that he inherited from
his Democratic predecessor are not
paying off. He called a- temporary
halt to further increases, in com-
pensatory funds.
He seemed to take almost the
opposite tack yesterday. He called
for a major new federal invest-
ment of $L5 billion over the next
two years, much of it in precisely
those schools receiving compen-
satory money.
GOP Chiefs Reportedly Warn
Nixon of Carswell Rejection
(Continued from Page 1)
first suggested it in a floor
speech Monday. Sen. Bayh and
other opponents took it up as
a means of attracting needed
GOP votes.
They reasoned that such a
move would attract some Re-
publicans who would be reluc-
tant to cast an outright vote
against President Nixon's sec-
ond choice for the high court
vacancy. Last November, the
Senate rejected his first choice.
Judge Clement F. Baynswortb
jr.
Sen. Roman L. Hruska. R^
Neb., disputed tbe liberal Claim
that they had the votes. “I
took a hard count yesterday and
there are sufficient votes to de-
feat a recommit move and to
confirm Carswell.” he said.
While Sen. Brooke was predict-
ing defeat. Sen. Henry M. Jack-
son. D„ Wash., formally an-
nounced his opposition to the
nomination in a Senate speech,
and Sen. Robert W. Packwood,
Eti, Ore., said that “in all like-
lihood" he would also vote to
reject the confirmation.
Opponents acknowledge that
they will need 12 or 13 Repub-
lican defectors to defeat the
nomination. They could count
on Sen. Charles E. Gooden and
Sen. Jacob K. Javits of New
York, Sen. Clifford F. Case of
New Jersey, Sen. Brooke and,
probably. Sen. Packwood as al-
most certain.
Sen. Charles H. Percy. R- HL.
on vacation in Africa, indicated
earlier that he would vote
against the nomination.
That left a minimum of seven
votes that Carswell opponents
would have to pick up from a
list that included Sen. George
D. Aiken and Sen. Winston L.
Proufcy of Vermont; Sen. Caleb
J. Boggs and Sen. John J. Wil-
liams of Delaware, Sen. Mark
O. Hatfield of Oregon, Sen. Wil-
liam B. Saxbe, Ohio, Sen. Rich-
ard S. Schwefleer of Pennsyl-
vania, Sen. Margaret Chase
Smith of Maine, Sen. Charles
McC. Mathias of Maryland, Sen.
Hiram. L. Fong of Hawaii, Sen.
Marlow W. Cook of Kentucky
and Sen. Norris Cotton of New
Hampshire.
Sen. Bayh. meanwhile, releas-
ed a study of 132 opinions Judge
Carswell has written since 1959
as a federal district and circuit
Judge in Florida. It showed, he
said, that Judge Carswell was
reversed outright 46 times and
partially reversed six times and
affirmed 70 times.
Hijacked Plane
Repaired in Peru,
Leaves for Cuba
LIMA, Peru, March 25 (Reuters).
—A hijacked Argentine Comet-4
airliner with 50 people aboard left
here for Cuba today after a
mechanical problem was corrected.
The airliner landed here earlier
today from Santiago, Chile, for a
refueling stop. It was unable to
tftfcp off again for nine hours be-
cause the engines could not be
restarted.
A -number of passengers, includ-
ing five children, were allowed to
leave the aircraft here.
Tbe armed hijackers, reportedly
an Argentine named Cacdo and Lis
pregnant wife, took over the air-
craft shortly after it took off freon
the Argentine city of Cordoba yes-
terday on an internal flight.
The aircraft, carrying seven crew
members end 43 passengers, was
planning to stop at Quayaqiii,
Ecuador, on its way to Cuba, air-
port officials said.
N.Y. Mafia Leader
Posts $75,000 Bond
NEW YORE, March 25 (Reu-
ters). — Mali a boss Carlo Gambino
was freed on $75,000 bail here af-
ter first refusing to put up bond
and shouting his innocence to
charges of conspiracy to commit a
$6 million armored car robbery.
“I stay in jaiL rm Innocent and
Tm not going to put up five cents,”
shouted tbe 67-year-old Gambino,
reported successor of gangland
chieftain Vito Genovese who died
in a federal prison last year.
But half an hour later. Gambino
paid the ban and was freed until
the hearing Thursday of the charges
on which he was arrested Monday
in Brooklyn,
MICHEL-SWISS
Agnew Denies Row With Mosbacher
Over Pompidou 9 s Visit to Chicago
WASHINGTON, March 25 (AP).— Vice-President Spiro T ;
Agnew said today reports that he was critical of U-S. Chief of
Protocol ‘Bmii Mosbacher in connection with the visit of French
President Georges Pompidou “are totally without foundation.”
He said he hoped Mr. Mosbacher would continue to serve In
his present post “for many yeans to come-”
Mr. Agnew, said that the story “quoting so-called informed
sources' is an obvious attempt to promote a dispute between two
officials where none exists.”
The story referred to by the Vice-President, published in The
Washington Post an din on earlier edition of the International
Herald Tribune said Mr. Agnew blamed Mr. Mosbacher fo rthe in-
cidents In Chicago involving pro-Israel demonstrators and Mr.
Pompidou.
According to the story, an “Informed State Department source"
was quoted as saying: ''Vice-President Agnew places the blame for
the fiasco in Chicago on Mosbacher. He can tends there would have
been no trouble if Mosbacher hadn't alienated [Chicago] Mayor
[Richard J.] Daley’s office."
Mr. Daley was alienated, the story said, quoting the State De-
partment sources, because Mr. Mosbacher would not deal directly
with him and sent lower-echelon personnel to Chicago to try to
set up arrangements behind the mayor's back.
Mr. Daley was reportedly so incensed over this that he sent
a telegram to Mr. Mosbacher in California, which was Mr. Pom-
pidou’s last stop before Chicago, protesting Mr. Mosbacher 's handl-
ing of the visit, tbe story said.
The cool reception that Mnyor Daley and his police gave the
Pompidou arrival was blamed by the Vice-President on Mr. Mos-
bacher 's handling of arrangements, the State Department sources
was quoted os saying.
3 Shipowners
Indicted in U.S-
For Loan Fraud
NEWARK. N.Jm March 25 (AP».
—A U.S. grand jury has indicted
five men — including three inter-
national shipping executives — for
allegedly arranging $2.4 million in
unsupported loans from a bank.
The 61-count Indictment, an-
nounced yesterday, also named 23
shipping corporations as defen-
dants — 14 of them Panamanian,
five Liberian and one chartered in
London. The other three are
registered in New York.
The three shipping executives
were John P. Eatsoulakos of
Athens, John T.W. McTaggart of
London, and Michael Markaginnis
of New York. U.S. attorney Frede-
rick Lacey described them as ship-
owners and shipping executives.
Mr. Lacey said that, in essence,
the defendants were charged with
undertaking to “obtain improvl
dent loans” from the Midland Bank
and Trust Company of Paramus.
NJ. He described Improvident
loans as those not properly sup-
ported by adequate collateral or
documents.
Also indicted was New Jersey
Assemblyman Peter Moral tea, who
is also a former director of the
bank. ■ The fifth person named was
John Pensec. former president and
director of the bank.
Ray Is Transferred
To Smaller Prison
PETROS. Term., March 25 (UPD.
— James Earl Ray, the convicted
killer of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther
King jr, was transferred today
from the state penitentiary at
Nashville to a smaller maximum-
security facility at Brushy Moun-
tain near here.
Officials said he wfil be housed
In a single cell in one of the cell
blocks, and “will get exactly the
same treatment as any other pris-
oner. We plan to work out a work
program for him, but we don’t know
yet just what that will involve.”
Ray, serving 99 years, was Jailed
for one year at Nashville, where
he complained of his close confine-
ment and the lack of a work and
recreation program. He won a fed-
eral court order giving him work
to do in prison, but later complain-
ed the order was ignored.
T hurmond A nn ids
Claim of Role
In Nixon Vote
WASHINGTON. March 25
fAP'. — Sen. Strom Thurmond,
R-. S.C.. issued then retracted
r ester da v a claim that his ef-
forts had been effective in
persuading many Americans,
particularly Southerners, to
vote for President Nixon.
“In all modesty. I believe
my efforts were effective in
convincing many Americans,
especially In the Southern
states, that Air. Nixon should
be President,” said a Thur-
mond statement comment Lng
on the Nixon school desegrega-
tion message.
But not for long. Sen.
Thurmond came personally to
the Senate Press Gallery to
ask that the passage be edit-
ed out of the written state-
ment.
Soviet Leader in Iran
TEHERAN. March 25 lUFP.—
Soviet President Nikolai V. Pod-
gorny arrived here today for a
six-day visit as the guest of the
Shah of Iran.
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Page 4
INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1970
* *
For Foreign Sales
House Backs $770 Million in Arms Credit
By John W. Finney
WA SHINGTON, March 25
WYT),- The House approved
legislation yesterday authorizing
$770 million in credit sales of arms
to other countries, particularly
developing nations, over the next
two years.
Administration officials, mean-
while. told the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee that foreign
sales on credit of arms could he
expected to increase in the coming
years as part of the Nixon Doc-
trine of assisting friendly nations
to assume the burden of their own
defense.
Trial Site Shift
Denied to Manson
LOS ANGELES. March 25 tUFD.
—Charles M. Manson and co-
defendant Patricia Krenwinkel
were denied their motion for a
change of venue in the Sharon
Tate murder case on grounds pre-
trial publicity had "been absolute-
ly unparalleled in history.”
Superior Court Judge Malcolm
Lucas ruled that a change of
venue would be “ineffectual, be-
cause it would simply change the
area of intense publicity.”
He agreed that pre-trial publicity
had been "very, very extensive.”
but be added that “I find that it
has been substantially equal
throughout the entire state of Cali-
fornia."
Deputy Defense Secretary David
Packard told the committee that
the arms credits would he extend-
ed to such nations as Taiwan, Iran
and South Korea, all countries in
which he said “we have vital se-
curity interests” but which were
economically unable to buy outright
the arms they needed to "protect
our mutual security interests.”
The legislation, passed by the
Eouse by a 35l-to-26 vote, now goes
to the Senate, where it will be
considered by the Foreign Relations
Committee.
One critical question being raised
by the Senate committee Is whether
the administration, in offering the
credit sales of arms, is dislocating
the domestic economies of the
developing countries.
Air. Packard and 17. Alexis
Johns i Under Secretary Of State
for Pc^Jcal Affairs, assured the
committee that in extending arms
credits the executive branch took
into consideration economic as wen
as military considerations to make
Cabinet Gets Nixon Gift
WASHINGTON, March 25 fl&eu-
ters».— The U. S. cabinet now has
a longer, larger table around
which to hold their meetings— a
54,500 gift to the White House
from President Nixon. The oval
table, made of mahogany and
topped with leather, is only the
fourth to be used for cabinet
meetings since the late 1800s, and
replaces one which had been In
use since 194L
Milan Trade Fair
12 days of general trade fair
292 days of specialized
trade shows
Figures speak for themselves.
Hera then is the picture of Mi-
lan's last annual May^April exhi-
bition cycle: 43 specialized trade
shows as welt as the general
trade fair □ 23,797 exhibitors
□ over 1.3 million sq.yds. of
display sites-and premises □ 90
countries sending exhibitors □
74 countries officially participat-
ing □ 4,260,271 visitors from 137
countries of all continents.
The Advance Catalogue, Itetfng
80% of all exhibits shewn at the
big April trade lair, is publish-
ed every year on February 1st.
Its detailed index of commer-
cial hems 7s In Italian, English,
French, German and Spanish.
Plan a visit to Milan Trade Fair
between 14 and 25 April next
Make a point of coming to the
specialized trade show that cov-
ers your line of business.
Visitors* Cuds and Information
may be obtained from: Segreta-
ria Generals della Flora di Mi-
lano, Largo Domodossola 1,
20145 Milano (Italy) or from
the Milan Fair Representative:
Comm. Pierre Lam peril, 4 Rue
de Leningrad, 76 Paris 8*
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sure there would be no Interference
with the recipient country's pace of
economic and social development.
Sen. J. W. Fulbright, D., Ark,
the committee chairman, replied
that he “could not think at a worse
way to do so than to make it easy
for them to buy bigger and better
armaments."
The legislation passed by the
House contains policy amendments
encouraging the President to seek
ways to control the international
trade In arms, cautioning against
the sale of arms to military govern-
ments that deny “social progress
or “fundamental rights" to their
people, and calling upon the Pres-
ident to negotiate a Middle East
arms limitation with the Soviet
Union while making sure that
adequate arms credits are available
to Israel to protect its security.
The administration-requested
legislation passed by the Bouse
represents a two-year extension of
a law passed in 1963 as Congress
tried to impose some controls over
Pentagon sales of arms abroad.
Before 1968 there were no limita-
tions on the amounts of arms that
the Pentagon could sell on credit.
Since the 1968 law. the Pentagon
has had to obtain congressional au-
thorization for credit sales and
Congress in turn imposes ceilings
on the amount of such sales.
Interest Rates
The two-year extension, for ex-
ample, sets a ceiling of S385 million
in credit sales in fiscal year 1971
and fiscal year 1972. The credits
usually are extended for a ten-year
period at an interest rate com-
parable to the rate the federal gov-
ernment has to pay to borrow
money.
In considering the extension of
the law. the Senate Foreign Rela-
tions Committee Is raising the
question of whether similar con-
gressional limitations should be
imposed on the sale and transfer
of surplus weapons. Vast amounts
of surplus weapons are now becom-
ing available, and the Pentagon
presently is under no congressional
restrictions on the amounts of
these weapons that it sells or gives
to foreign countries.
An example of how the Pentagon
transfers surplus weapons was rais-
ed by Sen. Fulbright, who asked
about reports that Turkey was pre-
paring to transfer 100 surplus tanks
to Pakistan, to be replaced by newer
tanks from the United States. The
senator observed that such a trans-
fer would seem to be an “under-
handed sort of way to evade'* a
UR. embargo on arms shipments to
Pakistan and India.
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Killed in Nevada
To Halt Disease
GARDNER VTLLE, Nev.. March 25
| ’AP). — More than 800.000 hatchery-
raised cut-throat trout afflicted
with a strange “whirling disease”
were put to death yesterday, then
buried in a mass grave to prevent
the spread of the disease.
"It’s one of the saddest days of
my life,” said Charles Messier, man-
ager of the Lahontan National Fish
Hatchery, after chemicals were
poured into the ponds where the
fish were kept.
The execution was ordered by
the U.S. Bureau of Sports Fisheries
and Wildlife out of fear the para-
sitic disease might spread and en-
danger the multimlllion-dollar Pa-
cific salmon industry.
The Lahontan cut-throat trout,
a rare breed, grow to large sizes.
The disease produces crooked spines
and misshapen heads. Experts
agreed it Is harmless to humans
who eat the fish. It seldom kills
the fish, but sends them Into
whirling spasms, making them easy
prey.
Hatchery ponds will be disin-
fected and restocked with healthy
eggs. Fresh well water will replace
the river water that may have
brought the disease.
tjiwarww...~
UaUed Press international.
S PEAKIN G OF EXPERIENCE — Cheryl Tate, Gilbert Santana and Edward VireUa,
with a prop hypodermic syringe, describi ng their addiction to a group of youngsters.
3 N.Y. Children Tell of Drug Addiction
NEW YORK. March 25
fNYT;. — Three youths, two 12
rears old and one 11, described
the horrors n( drug addiction to
other New York children.
Gilbert said be had sniffed
glue, smoked marijuana, sniffed
heroin and “skin-popped” hero-
in. Edward said that he had
sniffed glue.
She was referred to phoenix
House by school officials, and
she said she hoped to return
to school and eventually go on
to college.
"It was bad, real bad,” said
Cheryl Tate, 12, a small, deli-
cately featured child. *T forgot
about school, all I cared about
was drugs.”
Up to six months ago, Cheryl
said, she was mainlining heroin
three times a day.
The children, Cheryl, Edward
VireUa. who is 11. and Gilbert
Santana, 12, described their
experiences to winners of an
anti-narcotics poster contest.
Phoenix House, where the
three children now live and are
receiving treatment, is a clty-
eupported home for the treat-
ment of youthful drug users.
Cheryl, the most talkative of
the three, was asked why she
started on drugs.
“I was curious to know; out
of curiosity,” she said, "I started
smoking pot every day, then I
was snorting dope, skin-popping
and then mainlining.”
The youths’ conference was
sponsored by the March on
Drugs Corps, an anti-narcotics
organization that hopes to im-
plement a nationwide program
to warn schoolchildren about
the use of drugs.
A spokesman for the group
said it planned a “drug-out” In
Central Park in April at which
more than 50 young members
of Phoenix House will describe
their drug experiences.
Film on Martin Luther King
Shown at 1.000 Theaters
Chevron Oil
Accused of
347 Abuses
WASHINGTON. March 25
«UPI).— Interior Secretary Walter
Hicket accused the Chevron Oil
Co. today of 347 violations of off-
shore drilling regulations in the
area where one of its platforms
has spewed a huge oil slick iu the
Gulf of Mexico.
Mr. Hick el told a news confer-
ence he had asked the Justice
Department to convene a grand
jury in New Orleans to investigate
what he called “evidence" of the
Infractions.
He said Chevron failed to main-
tain in 137 of its 178 wells off-
shore from Louisiana devices call-
ed -storm chokes that could have
prevented the runaway well and
fire that led to the pollution.
‘Added 210 Violations*
He also charged “an additional
210 violations” by Chevron of other
regulations. He did not spell them
out brit said they included “lack
of pressure sensors, ignition wir-
ing not shielded against fire, and
inoperative surface safety valves.”
Mr. Hickel said the grand jury
should also examine the perfor-
mance of companies Chat have the
remainder of the 7,000 offshore
wells In the gulf. He said
preliminary investigations Indicat-
ed other violations would be un-
covered. He said he had no idea,
however, how many other com-
panies or wells would be Involved.
If there are other violations, he
said, he wanted the Justice De-
partment- to “prosecute to the full
extent of the law."
The law under which the gov-
ernment can act is the 1953 Outer
Continental Shelf Lands Act,
which provides fines up to $2,000
a day or six months in jail, or
both.
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Alcohol and Gasoline DO Mix ,
Says a Congressman From N.D.
WASHINGTON. March 25 (NYT). — A North Dakota congress-
man suggested to a Senate subcommittee yesterday that if Amer-
icans used a mixture of grain alcohol and gasoline in their care
they could reduce air pollution and bring an end to farm sub-
sidies while boosting rural economies.
Republican Thomas S. Kleppe told members of the Senate
subcommittee on Air and Water Pollution that such an alcohol-
gasoline mixture would reduce hydrocarbon exhaust emission by
as much as 50 percent, prolong engine life, and give greater power
without a lead additive.
He Said that the increased cost of such a fuel would be com-
parable with the cost presently estimated for higher octane, nan-
leaded gasolines now contemplated by the oil industry'.
An aide to the congressman later said- that an Agriculture
Department expert had given figures to the subcommittee indicat-
ing that the cost of a gallon of gasoline would rise about 5
cents with the use of grain alcohol in the mix. The cost of
plant conversions and new plants was estimated as $6 billion.
Recent statements by oil Industry spokesmen have put the In-
creased cost of higher octane gasoline at 2A to 4 cents per gallon
higher. They also estimate costs of $5 billion to $5 billion 'lor
new refining equipment.
Rep. Kleppe argued that since the two costs were so dose,
it would be better to use grain alcohol as a solution to pollution
problems because of the resulting assistance such a fuel use
would give to farm economies.
ATLANTA. G&~ March 25 (API-
—Mrs. Martin Lather King jr. last
night attended the film “Bang," a
documentary on her husband's work
during the most effective days of
the civC-righta movement She
jt “tremendously moving.'*
With Mis. Sing at a downtown
Atlanta theater, one of more than
IjQOO across the nation showing
the Dim simultaneously, were their
four young children.
“I think seeing this will help us
to understand that nonviolence —
that the philosophy and techniques
of nonviolence, which are the very
core of our movement— have done
more to bring about changes in our
society than any other single thing
that we can point to,” Mrs. King
said.
“King: A Filmed Record . . .
Montgomery to Memphis” depicts
the late civil-rights leader and the
nmpH of people who followed him
from the begtontog of his career
until his assassination.
Streets of Atlanta
It ends with the soft hoof-
beats of the mules pulling the
wagon bearing 1%. King’s coffin
through the streets of Atlanta in
April. 1968.
The film Is a vivid historical
record of Dr. King's leadership
during the most successful era ol
the civil-rights movement. It con-
tains lengthy scenes of brutality,
triumph*, the great mass marches,
sit-ins and Jail-ins during the
movement.
In or Against
T>yh sequence of the film is
described and explained by the
actual voices of Dr. King and
others in or against the movement.
The film, which was shown in
public theaters nationwide and In
Canada and Europe for ctne night
only, was produced by Ely Landau.
It Includes special messages from
Harry Belofonte, Sidney Poirier,
Charlton Heston, Anthony Quinn,
Diaharm. . Carroll and Burt Lan-
caster.
Proceeds of the 55-per-ticket
showings were to go to the Martin
Luther King Jr. Special Fund, an
organization dedicated to the
struggle against poverty and in-
equality through nonviolent means.
In Atlanta, Dr. King’s home
town, the film was a sellout at 11
theaters, three of them added yes-
terday to .meet t&fcet demands.
All theaters Involved in the show-
ing donated box-office proceeds to
the fund.
The showing of the film wis
marred by telephoned bomb threats
in Washington, st. XjQuIb • and
Macon, Ga. However, no bombs
were found In any of the theaters.
DriveOnto Make
King’s Birthday
A U.S. Holiday
WASHINGTON, March 25
(AF).— Petitions said to cany
more than six million, names
of persons who want to make
the birthdate of the Rev. Dr. ft
Martin Luther. King Jr- a na-
tional holiday were deposited
yesterday an the desk of Sep. ’ll'
John Conyers.
Rep. Conyers, Dm Mich, and
Rep. Shirley Chisolm, D., N.Y„
told a news conference. they
will seek hearings shortly on .
Rep. Conyers’s bill to create
the holiday.
Howard Bennett, chairman
J cf a New York-based commit*
j tee to campaign for the holi-
day, said the petition signa-
tures Include persons of all
races and from all states. Mr.
Conyers said he has received .
506.000 - letters urging such a
holiday.
Filling High Court May Mean
The End for 504 on Death Row
By John P. MacKenrie
WASHINGTON, March 25 (WP).iFortas's resignation last May left
—The United States, which had no an even number of members,
executions In 1968 or 1969, could The pending capital punishment
be building up far one of the |Case jg that of William Maxwell, a
grimmest seasons In the recent his- Negro who has been under death
tory of the death penalty. (sentence since 1962 for the rape of
By latest count, 502 men and two! a white woman In Hot Springs,
women are in death-row cells Ark. Maxwell was hours from
LOS ANGELES. March 25 (WP)
— Controversial broadcaster Joe
Pyne, 45, died of cancer here Mon-
day.
Through U years of television
and radio discussion shows la Los
Angeles, Mr. Pyne worked, as he
said, “to provoke people Into listen-
ing and- thinking” His argumenta-
tive style won him a wide follow-
ing, which at its peak included a
television series syndicated In 83
cities and an hour-long radio show
syndicated in more than 450 com-
munities. Because. of his Illness, he
Save up his radio show a year ago
and had not appeared on television
since November.
A native of Chester, Fa., the
marine veteran lost a leg at Oki-
nawa. He oegan his broadcasting
career 25 years ago in Luxnberton,
N.C., ynd claimed to have originated
the two-way radio talk show in the
late 1940s at a small station in
Kenosha, Wis.
Survivors include his widow,
former Swedish actress Britt Larsen,
and a son and daughter.
throughout the country. Some
have been there for ten years, their
executions delayed, while awaiting
Supreme Court rulings on a num-
ber of crucial death penalty Issues.
yr the Supreme Court rejects the
claims of the condemned men this
year, next year or the year after,
there could follow a rash of execu-
tions throughout the country.
How the Supreme Court will re-
solve the death penalty question
depends, among other things, on
the confirmation of the ninth jus-
tice and how soon thereafter the
deeply divided court Is ready to
confront once again issues that
were put aside when Justice Abe
Rapist in Texas
Is Sentenced to
1,001-Year Term
DALLAS. Texas, March 25 (DPI).
—A jury yesterday sentenced Larry
Joe Knox, 23. to 1.001 years in
prison— the longest term in Texas
history— for raping a young tele-
phone operator.
It was the third huge .prison
term handed down to the Dallas-
Fbrt Worth area hi a month by
juries concerned with law and
order. *
Joseph franklin sills, 50. was
s e n ten c e d to 1,000 years In prison
by a Dallas jury Feb. 26 for rob-
bery.
Samuel Hempfcll, 19, convicted
of raping an 18-year -old high
school coed, was sentenced March
IE to 800 years in prison by a Fort
Worth jury.
An eight-man, four-woman Dis-
trict Court Jury deliberated only
40 minutes before finding Knox
guilty of raping, beating and cut-
ting with a razor blade a 24-year-
old woman last summer.
execution in September, 1966, when
his lawyers obtained a stay from
Justice Byron R. White, which led
to new hearings In the lower courts.
It is not clear precisely why Max-
well’s case remains undecided now
that It has been returned to the
High Court-
Deadlocked Court
The best guess is that the court
was deadlocked four to four over
reversing the conviction, or per-
haps split three or more ways over
the basis, for its derision in the
(%se brought by the legal defense
fund of the National Association
for the Advancement of Colored
People. The case was argued in
March, 1969, but was set for re-
argument in the fall along with
several other difficult cases. The
Justices may have felt that no
matter which side had the most
votes, the case was so close and
so important that - only- a fully
manned court should resolve It.
Thus the ' totes of Maxwell and
other condemned . became
entwined in the battle between the
Senate and fctia Nixon ■ administra-
tion over the nomination of Clement
F. Eftynsworth. The fight over G.
Harrold Carswell has delayed a
final derision still further, pro-
longing the inmates’ lives and their
suspense.
Maxwell's ease and a number of
others woe postponed Indefinitely
as the court’s fall term began.
The postponement was announced
without explanation, but many
lawyers and other observers felt
that none was needed.
Death-row residents now have
reason to hope that the Carswell
nomination is rejected— regardless
of his views on capital punishment
—or at least delayed long enoug h
to postpone the re-argument until
the fall The last scheduled argu-
ment session -of this term Is late
April.
'TNTEKX&nONAL REAL ESTATE”
AFPEAB6 E VERY
THURSDAY & SATURDAY
Motel BUNNtK 1
single
ft 21- 1
doubJe ft 32-/35.-
three, bed ft 41-
IT
tour bed
R4L-
on the highway
■howar, bath, tollat. huttng
Arnhem -Utrecht,
Taras and service included
4 miles before
Ts|. 03405-2744
Utrecht.
TV Interviewer
Joe Pyne, 45,
Dies of Cancer
3 Gars Catch Fire
In Oxygen Cloud
On Apollo-13 Pad
CAPE KENNEDY, Ha, March 26
(UPD.— Three security cam drove
through a cloud of oxygen vapor
at the Apollo -IS launch pad today
and caught fire several hundred
yards from the Saturn- 5 moon
rocket.
The three drivers abandoned the
vehicles and escaped injury. The
towering rocket Itself was in no
danger, but a trial countdown was
delayed for several hours.
Tatnmeh crews had just started
pumping frigid liquid oxygen into
the Saturn’s third stage when the
accident occurred. The propellant
loading was immediately halted.
The oxygen vapor normally is
vented, from the rocket during fuel-
ing operations, and the launch pad
is supposed to be clear of all per-
sonnel during this hazardous opera-
tion. ;
The security officers had just
cleared the pad area and, after
making certain' all personnel . had
left, the cars were preparing to
leave through a gate at the base
of tiis pad when the fire flared.
Apollo- 13 astronauts James E.
Lovell, Thomas K. Mattingly and
Fred W.- Boise are scheduled for
launch to the moon April 11. Today’s
trial countdown wax the last major
test before launch..
ILS, School in Monaco
Faces Bankruptcy
PHILADELPHIA, March 25 (API.
—The American College of Monaco,
of which Prince Rainier and Prin-
cess Grace ere academic overseers,
asked the U.S. District Court yes-
terday. for permission to reorganise
under federal bankruptcy laws.
■The petition was signed by John
B. Kelly Jr„ president of the col-
lege's board of managers and. a
brother of • Princess Grace, the
former actress Grace Kelly.
in its petition, the college listed;
assets of $11,700 and liabilities of
$124,093. The: largest single debt
listed was $87,537 to Prince Rainier
for money advanced to -keep the
school open.
Gen. J. E, Rudder
Dies; President
Of Texas A.&M.
HOUSTON. March 25 CUPD.—
Maj. Gen. J. Earl Rudder, 59, a
hero of the Normandy invasion who
later became one of Texas’s lead-
ing educators, cQed Monday.
A spokesman at St Luke's Hos-
pital said that. Mr. Rudder, presi-
dent of the Texas - A. and -M. Uni-
versity system, died of a circulatory
collapse. He heef been .president of
the university since 1859 ■ and head
of the entire system since 1086.
Mr. Rudder wita. called to active
duty In -18CL Twp years later, he
organized add trained the 2d
Ranger Battalion, which waa given
the mission :of .scaling .a. 100-foot
cliff on the Normandy coast on
D-Day. ..
Mr. Rudder, a lieutenant colonel
at the time, was wounded twice &
(he assault of the cliff but remain-.
ed in action. Half of his men were.'
wotmded or killed. He retired from' I
the Army as a major general in :
1967.
•i"
Martin Tananbanm
NEW YORK. Marth 25 (NYT)—
Martin Tananbaum. 54, presided J
of Yonkers Raceway and a cos- i
troversral behind-the-scenes figure .TH
in New York politics, died hart ri ,. 1
yesterday of .a heart attack.
Ip 14 sometimes stormy year* fy’'
as boss of Yonkers Raceway. Mb l 1 ”"
Tananbaum operated under » v “ :
operated
policy that outspoken confront*
tion was- preferable to quiet tb> ^
lomacy.
' Harness racing was the mart*-'
visible of his three major spheres
of activity. The others were
business world, to which he awT* :r -
his. brothers made fortunes from'- 1 1
textiles, and the world of politics.
He was a generous contributor to *
the Democratic party. ; "
Adm. RE. Jennings 1 .
WASHINGTON, March 35 CAP).
—Retired Vice-Adm. Ralph JS. Jen-
nings, 72, who commanded the
“Fighting Lady” aircraft carrier in
World War H, died Monday in New,
York City, the navy reported yes-
terday. The cause of death was not
disclosed.
Adnt Jennings commanded the
USS Yorktown, nicknamed the
“Fighting Lady." during the cam-
paigns- for the. occupation of the
Mariana Islands^and the. Battle of
the Philippine. Sea..
He saw other service during the
war as commanding officer- of the
auxiliary aircraft carrier USS Co-
pahee, as a carrier ' division com-
mander and as commander of tin
carrier training 'squadron of the
Pacific fleet.
'Ji--
:>:!
Si-.
'J: 1 '
5G-
■1:
,3n
I'v?
%
I Si,
«/•
, Gen. Vaclav Palecefc . ^
PORTOLA VALLEY. Calif, . v * i
March 25 (urn . — Gen. Variav Pa- :
leeek. 68, who fought with ibeHree
Czech forces to World War H and ~
later was Czech representative on
the Allied Control Council in Ser-
liru died Monday in the home of ..
a friend here.
Gen. Palecek was arrested when * 1 1
the Communists seia^cori&d' ol k
hb iyyrr ielpTiri In xg48-8hd Was im-
prisoned for eight yattfc.- ^Allowed *
recently to come to'. -the United
States, he spent the "last five
of hislS as
Portola Valley home c *tu lk . l ,
Bourke.
V ■
Reverdy Wadsworth - ,
GENESEO, N.Y., MAK* 25 *"
— Reverdy Wadsworth, * . to® 1 *® '" ,l
whose brother James wes a •
U& ambassador to . the. UV^,
Nations. Js dead at aga.SS. ; rii : ,
Mr. Wadsworth ■*.*•555: X.
: John
uretary • to c Pres&est . \
Lincoln and - ftdbMT <* .:***% J
under v Prea&tefto" J r ■J?
to wfay and _■ IM ,i;
DSAYir ytrncs
•SVES6S
SffifSS B&gSp
Page 5
INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1970
De Gaulle 9 s Boycott
Paris Held Ready to Resume
Its Place on Council of WEU
baBBS, MOT* 25.— France -will
aVtSEFito seat cm the Western
By James Goldsborough
Union ministerial coun-
the next meeting May 7 in
informed' soirees said to-
J It i ^wc roore -w ill en d the French.
* * J fcSntt of the .WEU council begun
•’ * ft, r , !?*»=-:
V ' Ilnl
orders in February,. 19S8.
**g“ftoqr«s revealed the Wench
following ir meeting to-
Foreign Minister Mau-
, S wt Oeorges Hoa ~
-
•>i.
Cabinet Post
Creates New
Snag in Italy
“ bqmX'Mot* 25 CAP) /-A can-
^flSdwdoped. tod*y Mm the
... •"SL aaa Democrats and the 3o-
4 kOii* w ““ — i.i»k «» *rr should
->S££Fo*er which party
' - . 0*^7 r ■■■rJmi ynirtietAT* If
■ :p 0 ia E a foreign minister in Italy’s
** center-left government
■ ,v= > rrhe SodaHsts were putting pres-
• ' > - JranM^er-designate Mariano
**£?**- 3eadcr NBmL
• Tfa & Christian Democrats. especi-
- ' w thfl left wing, wanted Acting
• Aide More to
He is a former
reportedly
„ t backers
JT’i r. Stumor that Mr. More
1 I l n vSSttMt Join the cabinet except
ibinister. Mr. Rumor
it Moro in the government
IWTfiS «.»!*» *«*«
• -jnpport him. ,
1 *'\as U Biggest Problem
** The tug-of-war over the Foreign
’ 'irnifstry was apparently Mr. Ru-
-l 2?£||5 problem in putting
■-Jjfljrwtl cabinet a
5 r3S> he received Monday night
President Giuseroe
• ' • Political sources said that Mr.
V.- C-rLdc was Mpected l to go to Mr
-- '-Banff* fi*» week with a list of
\V_ . tarf 25 ministers drawn from
h- candidates of the center-left /par-
- r : ^ TOese Include the Unitary
'-iSakta. and the Republican
- - " mrtiea a* well as the Christian
' -- ' £nocrats and the Socialists.
. ‘ c -m Genoa, meanwhile, port
■ . ‘ . tom was halted today by a
• ■'SeS strike called throughout
■" fenrovtnee of Genoa by the three
"^loet important Italian labor leder-
Hons.
^5be four-hour general strike was
- to protest the rising cost of
r -E A total of 118 Italian and
" Tn-Itafian ships anchored in the
were affected by the strike. .
;^Me of Italians
;Ial-Natiou Plane
4froject Affirmed
JUDNICH. March 25 fAP>.— Fan-
Ainsraft GmbH, the manage-
cmnpaxiy handling the Brit-
jmnan-Italian construction of
MCEA-75 (multi-role combat
Ett fighter plane, said today
. no evidence that Italy would
aw from the joint project.
'Panaris spokesman was com-
ng an a report yesterday from
that France has offered to
a number of Mirage F-l
in Italy in an effort to
the Italians to abandon
'nt three-nation consortium build-
- ' nthe MRCA prototype.
- Tn latest contacts with our Ital-
'•^n partners we were assured of
Ml cooperation” the Pan-
■ spokesman said,
maria is composed of West
femacy’s Messerschmitt-Boelkow -
.Apiiah fhnbH,' with 50 percent Jn-
***, British Aircraft C6rp.. 33
' vwcent, and Plat SpA of Italy.
1 percent.
• tk .formal decision by the three
Wnmaift to go yfrpwd with the
Wfett H expected at a meeting
a Ifttnkh April in. The Panaris
. 'Wtesnan aid he felt a go-ahead
- cmld be taken lor granted.
CaurtSays Flying
-4 Siarfighter Is
Not Dangerous 9
. BCHLBSwiG, Germany.
. mb* 25 (AP >, — A . Schleswig-
State administrative
ruled today that flying
*_Jtet German F-104 Star-
; ^ter jet -was not “especially
:'*9enm.r...
^ court made the ruling
“rejecting the rfaim for high-
S trrivor benefits by the
r of a starfighter pilot
in the 1968 crash of his
s widow contended she was
algher benefits because her
■ ^ anti about to be pro
m ° te d when he died. The
said such an increase
• could 1x5 granted, under
w covering government em-
it the husband had
eruployed in a job that
“especially dangerous.”
West Germany's Navy
;^ir State began flying the
iter in 1861, 118 of the
tes haye crashed with the
; °f 55 pilots.
)rship in Libya
Libya, March 25
censorship
a - Papers was extended in
*22?* 1118 ’raeksid to include
foreign-language papers
here. Publishers were
must submit page proofs
siaox. president of the WEU as-
sembly; ' * . .
“I t.vitnic tiie French government
f r hfnfcy that the WEU ran
play an important role," Mr. hod-
tianx said, “providing that the
French position is fatwi into con-
sideration.*’
The French began their boycott
following a British attempt to bring
the Middle East situation before
the council. In fact, the French
seized on that issue to push their
charges that the conned was being
used for “other business.' - namely
an attempt to lobby Britain into
the Common. Market.
Market Politics
The y had long charged that the
otherWEU countries were using
the WEU to get Britain Into the
market through the bock door.
President Georges Pompidou be-
gan to soften the French stand
soon after his el ection last sum-
mer. He told. WEU members,
which axe the Common Market
countries plus Britain, that France
would recons ider retaking its seat
if the WEU were no longer used
as a “court of appeal” for Britain.
Mr. Housiaux indicated that
France had gotten those assurances
today.
The WEU, which Is the only or-
ganisation made up solely of the
Common Market countries plus
Britain, still is expected, to play
an important part in strengthen-
ing the contacts between the mar-
ket and Britain as negotiations for
British entry get under way this
summer.
AWhfwigi, t.hp Common Market
c ommission and council of min-
isters will do the negotiating with
the Briti s h. F rench sources allow
that the WEU will serve as a “fo-
rum id discusion” for economic co-
operation.
Actually, what has happened is
that wit h neg otiations ready to
begin, the WEU no longer Is needed
as a court of appeal
Parallel Crisis
The French move . also has its
symbolic importance, for it repre-
sents more softening by Mr. Pom-
pidou of rigid positions he in-
herited from Gen. de Gaulle. The
WEU crisis was a close parallel to
the 1965 Common Market crisis ?n
which the French boycotted Brus-
sels for seven months until they
obtained an absolute veto right
over decisions of the European
Lconomic Community.
This time. too. the French ran
say they got wha t the y wanted,
tho gh France's WEU partners
can say they didn't give up a
thing.
The origins of the WEU go back
to the Dunkirk Treaty of 1947 be-
tween France and Britain. The
Benelux conn trie - came. . in the
following year to form an alliance
against any future German mili-
tarism, and in 1954 the exigencies
of the cold war brought the West
Germans and Italians in.
•’ -O “Tv- V ■”-ja
United Press International.
INDEPENDENCE IN GREECE — Premier George Papa-
doponlos walking behind Regent George Zoitakis and his
wife yesterday as they entered -an Athens cathedral to
attend an independence day mass. Greece won its
independence from Turkish Ottoman rule 149 years ago.
TV Attachment Lets Viewer
Cultivate the ‘ Wasteland ?
By Jack Gould
France Arrests
Shopkeepers’
Revolt Leader
-The
PARIS. March 25 (AP)
French government bit back at the
rebellious shopkeepers movement
today by arresting Gerard Nicoud.
a firebrand leader accused of
organizing roadblocks and inciting
small businessmen not to pay taxes.
Mr. Nicoud, already under a sus-
pended sentence for “kidnapping”
two policemen last year, was ar-
rested in police court in the town
of Eourgoin-Jallieu where be and
16 others were being tried for
blocking traffic during yesterday’s
widespread shopkeeper roadblocks.
The government warrant said
Mr. Nicoud incited shopkeepers
and independent artisans to stop
paying all kinds of taxes beginning
March 16. and to withdraw aD
their funds from national banks,
postal checking and nil other
government-held accounts. Con-
viction could bring a maximum
$6,480 fine and two years prison,
under a law passed in the troubled
1930s.
Mr. Nicoud and the committe on
information and defense of the
shopkeepers movement, which he
leads, are attempting to pressure
the government into e as ing regula-
tions on taxes, license fees, social
security payments and other items.
Be Gaulle’s Speeches
Will Be Published
PARIS, March 25 (Reuters* A
Paris publishing house is plan-
ning tp put out in a live-volume
series all the speeches and mes-
sages made by former President
Charles de Gaulle between 1940
and 1969.
The publishing house, Llbrajrle
Plan, said the first volume, entitl-
ed “Pendant la Guerre” (“During
the War"*, covering the period from
1940 to 1946. will be out on April
20. The other volumes will be
published over the nest few
months.
Japan Will Push Drive
For Eased A-Checkup
TOKYO. March 25 <UPI).— For-
eign Minister Kiichi Aichl said to-
day that Japan will push ahead
with negotiations for an interna-
tional nuclear-inspection treaty.
During a meeting with Glenn
Seabiorg, ^b«.irman of the uB.
Atomic Energy Commission, he
asked him to support Japan's
desire for a simplified and non-
dlscrlmin&tory method Of inspec-
tion.
Japan signed the international
treaty against nuclear proliferation
Feb. 3. but with public objections
to the requirement for internation-
al inspection of nan-military nu-
clear industries.
OLD GREENWICH. Conn.,
March 25 CNYT».— The color televi-
sion equivalent of the long-playing
phonograph record received its first
use in the home of a layman here
last night.
The electronic video recording
lERV) device is as easy to operate
as a telephone and the colors in a
variety of entertainment and edu-
cational programs had almost a
phenomenal clarity and fidelity.
The system gives the viewer the
power to choose the program he
wants to see in the same way a
listener can pick a classical or rock
music album. He can play the
program at any time, and there
are no commercials.
- Instant Re-Run, Too
If he wants to see a beautiful or
p n wiling scene from a play for a
second time, it is only necessary
to push a button rewinding the
film In the EVR cartridge and
tflkn another look. The process
requires less than a minute.
Even more fayinating is another
button which freezes a sing l e pic-
ture in a program. In the case of
a tour of the Louvre, for in s tan c e ,
the TV director would have no
voice in how long one might stare
at the “Mona Lisa."
Taking the EVR unit out of the
Columbia Broadcasting System
laboratory and into the home be-
came possible after CBS and Mo-
torola. Inc., licensee to manufacture
the units, held a day of demons tra-
tions in New York.
Secret SKp-Up
The demonstration let one elec-
tronlca secret slip. In freezing
without comment a still photograph
from “Charlie Brown,” the Im-
portance of what engineers call
“reference EVR" became a matter
of public record.
The miniature EVR film, roughly
one-tenth the area of a standard
16-mm film, can be easily indexed
so that a viewer or student can
quickly pack out precise material
from what might be likened to an
encyclopedia wired for movement
and sound.
Dr. Gerard R. Sava, chief of neu-
rosurgery at Stanford Hospital, was
present at the demonstration. He
is working on an EVR film to
instruct interns in the. rapid diag-
nosis and treatment of head in-
juries, especially common in auto-
mobile accident victims brought to
hospital emergency rooms.
The EVR unit used at home here
last night weighed about 35 pounds
and was about 20 inches wide, 18
inches deep and just under eight
inches high. It required about five
minutes to hook up and could be
done easily by any layman. The
EVR sic* 1 ” 1 was fed through an
unused on the color T V set.
The economic Implications of EVR
are not too easy to grasp. Certatoly
it is not likely to supplant either
TV broadcasts over the air or cable
systems. The introductory price is
around $795. but with mass pro-
duction it is bound to come down.
Ftor the motion picture industry
the implications are bou nd t o be
intriguing. At present an EVR flhn
cartridge plays 26 minutes of color
or 52 minutes of black-and-white
but with thinner film, the r unn i ng
time might be increased to tbe
point where a movie producer
could deal directly with the con-
sumer.
The dream of picking up a new
movie at a supermarket or taking
it out on loan from a library no
longer seems quite so remote.
Zanuck’s Praise
NEW YORK, March 25 (API
Darryl F. Zaauck. chairman of the
board of 20th Century-Fox, said
he would recommend to the next
board meeting that Fox release its
entire library of Ehns “o™ 0X511
five years old tor home viewing
with tbe EVR device.
Mr Zanuck said the device ts
the greatest thing. It will save our
lives. It will save the motion pic-
ture industry-”
After attending tire CBS ^ e “’
onstration, Mr. Zaauck said he
believes the Fox board will accept
his recommendations and that the
first films would be available before
the end of the year.
He did not mention a rental price,
but a CBS official said he thought
it would be $5 or $6.
Chile Reports
Breaking Up
Planned Coup
Ex-Army General,
10 Officers Seized
SANTIAGO. Chile. March 25
(UFI) .—Military intelligence agents
smashed a coup plot timed for
April 10 with the arrest of II of
16 conspirators, the government of
President Eduardo Frei announced
today.
Tbe statement said tbe con-
spirators planned to seize power
through simultaneous seizure of
Mr. Fuel, bre defease minister and
the anny chief of staff.
The conspirators were Identified
as army officers in retirement and
on active service. Highest rank-
ing was retired Gen. Horacio Gam-
boa. Also identified was Lt. CoL
Eduardo Fuenzalida, on active
service.
Although some were Involved In
last October's “soldiers’ revolt," a
22-hour “uprising" for more pay
and better equipment, the leader
of that movement, retired Gen.
Roberto Viaux. played no role in
the latest plot, government offi-
cials said.
Gen. Viaux was in his home
recovering from an automobile ac-
cident. He is appealing a 200-dny
suspended “house arrest" sentence
for his part in last October's re-
volt.
Seven active and a dozen retired
officers, including Gen. Viaux's
father-in-law, were arrested Dec. 9
on alleged conspiracy charges.
A government official said the
latest plot seemed to lack political
definition. He described it as a
"backlash" from last October's pay
revolt.
Stromboli Awakens
STROMBOLL Italy, March 25
( Reuters The volcano on this
tiny, arid island north of Sicily
erupted during the night, throwing
stones and cinders more than 600
feet into the air. Scientists said
there is no cause for concern.
Bat Yomag Visitors Are e Indoctrmated’
Cuba Denies Training American Guerrillas
By Ear! W. Foell
UNITED NATIONS. N.Y.. March
25.— A high-ranking Cuban official
denied here yesterday that Havana
is training young Americans in
guerrilla warfare.
Carlos Rafael Rodriguez, who
made the denial, has been de-
scribed by Cubans as "the man who
taught Castro Communism.” He
is a top Communist party leader
and government minister in Ha-
vana.
While rejecting the guerrilla-
t raining allegation. Mr. Rodriguez
proudly proclaimed that the young
Americans, who he said had come
to Cuba to cut sugar cane, were
being “indoctrinated" to learn
“the meaning of imperialism all
around the world."
He said this was accomplished
by letting them see how Cuba had
been “structurally deformed" be-
fore Premier Fidel Castro took
over, and by helping young Amer-
icans to meet North Vietnamese
working and studying in Cuba.
This, he said, was not indoctri-
nation or “brainwashing'* to pre-
Copter Rescues
4 Trapped 3 Days
In French Alps
pare guerrillas. He said it was
intended to emphasize tbe solid-
arity of Cuban revolutionaries with
minorities in the United States
who had a «HTwiinr view of the
world.
Query on Better Ties
Mr. Rodriguez replied negatively
when asked about the chances for
improved relations between Cuba
and Washington, or between Cuba
and the Organization of American
Sxaies.
[Cuba has rejected U.S. condi-
tions for starting talks that could
lead to the resumption of relations
with tbe nations in the OAS. the
Associated Press reported It quot-
ed a statement to that effect by
ATP, the Cuban exile press agency,
based on a Havana broadcast to
Latin America last weekend.]
Mr. Rodriguez did hold out some
slight hope that an anti-hijacking
agreement might be reached in-
directly with the United States.
And he indicated that there was
room for improvement of bilateral
relations between Havana and in-
dividual Latin American states, as
long as it was outside the frame-
work of tbe OAS.
He sold the Castro government
was giving “due consideration" to
an American proposal for an anti-
hijacking agreement.
But he placed strict conditions
on Havana's eventual answer. An
CHAMONIX, France. March 25 f anti-piracy agreement would bo
r AP>. — A helicopter today rescued possible, ho asserted, only if it
four climbers who had been trapped were bilateral — drawn between the
on the 14.000-foot Mont -Blanc du ! United States and Cuba, which
Tacul by a snowstorm since Sun-
day. All were reported exhausted
and one or more may' have suf-
fered frozen toes.
Giovanni Fanton. 35. said: “I
was carried away by an avalanche
and my comrades saved me. It
was prudent to wait for improved
weather and we made a bivouac
practically at the summit."
All four men were taken to a
hospital, but none was believed to
be in serious condition.
The helicopter had to make
three trips to bring down the
climbers and two guides who were
taken up lor rescue efforts.
have no formal relations — and pro-
vided for “full reciprocity.”
He emphasized that reciprocity
meant that the United States
would have to return ships, planes
and passengers taken out of Cuba.
Discussion of an anti-hijacking
agreement has been taking place
secretly through the Swiss Embas-
sy in Havana, which handles
American affairs on the Island.
Lot Anpelei Timet
Anti-Castro Army Plan
MIAMI. March 25 (API. — Re-
cruiting stations to establish ah
exile anti-Castro army will open
soon in Miami and other cities,
a former Cuban general has an-
nounced.
Eulogio Cantuio said yesterday
that registration of volunteers
would start la two or three weeks.
He was Cuba’s ranking army of-
ficer when President Fulgencia
Batista flew into exile in 1959 in
the wake of Mr. Castro'S revolu-
tionary triumph. "I was in charge
of Cuba a day and a sight,” Mr.
CantClo said. “On Jan. 2
arrested me."
The recruiting project is part of
the “Torriente plan.” a new anli-
Castro movement launched, at an
exile rally two months ago by Jose
de La Torriente. a leader In the
Cuban colony here.
Recruiting facilities will be es-
tablished In all cities with si sable
Cuban colonies, Mr. Cantillo said.
In the United States there are
large colonies in Miami. New York.
Chicago and Los Angeles, and in
New Jersey.
Training for combat in Cuba
may be arranged in some Latin-
American country, Mr. Cantillo
said, adding that “many types of
training could legally be carried on
in (he United States, too, such as
shooting, marching and drilling.”
Bomb Damages
Greek Embassy
COPENHAGEN, March 25 (UPD.
—An unidentified man tossed a
Molotov cocktail into the building
housing the Greek and Israeli Em-
bassies today, injuring one Greek
official.
Police said the bomb, thrown
through a window of the section
housing the Greek Embassy, could
have been Intended for the ad-
joining Israeli offices.
They said the bomb started a
small fire In an embassy office.
The Greek press attach*. Georg
Georgiou. was admitted to a hospi-
tal with injuries to his hand from
broken glass suffered when the
window was shattered by the bomb.
vyCTT
A toast to the two world leaders of economic growth.
Over She ice with Alitalia.
Sooner or later you’ll want to travel between Italy
and Tokyo via Copenhagen, when you realize how much
business there is going on.
And since our flight is the only direct one between
Rome/Milan and Tokyo, you’ll want to fly with Alitalia,
over the Pole*.
It always makes a very pleasant round trip to come
back the southern way, but flying by the Polar Route
between Tokyo and Milan you’ll save time.
And time means business. Italy and Japan also mean
business. That’s why we’re flying the Polar Route :
to bring the two leaders of world economic growth
closer together.
'Finn April fat,
Snbjectto guv c iim a iitaiip w j idL
In cooperation with Air Frew*,
Lufthansa, Japan Air lines.
Alitalia
flAlYS WORLD AJRUNS
INTERNATIONAL
Jieralb
^Tribune
Published with The N«w Y»rk Timas and Tbo Washington Post
Pace 9— Thursday, March 26, 1970 *
Wise Decision on Mideast Arms
Superficially, the Nixon and Rogers Mid-
east statements of Saturday and Monday
answered Israel’s request to buy more Phan-
toms now. To this limited question the
reply was: No, not now, but the United
States will sell more jets “promptly If the
situation requires it” Fundamentally, how-
ever, the administration addressed the issue
of whether Washington should continue to
ensure that Israel maintains enough of a
military advantage to deter full-scale war.
On the crucial question the answer was yes.
There is no inconsistency In the tw.o an-
swers, merely a paradox whose nature is
Insufficiently understood.
Even Insiders who Know everything there
is to know about pilot readiness, delivery
times, battle tactics, anti-aircraft defenses
and the like, have trouble determining what
Israel's legitimate needs are. (Understand-
ably, Israeli and American experts differ.)
For outsiders, who must depend for their
military briefings on Israeli alarms and
Arab protests, the exercise is doubly difficult.
Actually, the exercise may not be necessary.
The important consideration is not the
numbers game but the underlying strategic
dynamic: Israeli air superiority deters war.
In its first 14 months the administration
had not been forced to define and decide
the Issue; It could coast on the Johnson
sale of 50 Phantoms. Now, however, Mr.
Nixon has made a basic decision of his own.
"If the UJ5.SR.. by Its military assistance
programs to Israel’s neighbors, does essen-
tially change the balance, then the United
States would take action to deal with that
situation,” said the President, making plain
he was taking into account Moscow’s ship-
ment of new anti-aircraft missiles and
advisers to Egypt. "Once that balance shifts
perceptibly. . , then the danger of war
greatly Increases.” By "balance,” Mr. Nixon
means, as the parties in the Mideast all
understand. Israeli superiority.
* * *
Some Arabs may be pleased that MT. Nixon
refused Israel’s Immediate request but, as
Cairo’s A1 Ahram correctly said right after
the President spoke over the weekend, "No
matter what the (Rogers announcement)
will be, it will be aimed at maintaining
Israel's superiority. . The Israelis surely
would have preferred to have their request
fully honored. But President Nixon’s care-
ful pledge to maintain the Mideast "bal-
ance” must be regarded as far more im-
portant to Israel's long-term security, and
to the deterrence of a regional war, than
even the most liberal Short-term arms deal.
It Is noteworthy, according to the Nixon-
Rogers statements, that maintaining the
"balance” Is desirable in Itself as an end
of American policy and does not depend on
Israeli acceptance of American political
terms.
In fact, a major turn In Mideast policy
is at hand. From the eager self-confident
activism of early 1969 ("What we see now is
a new. policy on the part of the United
States in assuming the initiative'') , Mr.
Nixon has eased Into a more reticent reality
('We have to realize that we have In the
Mideast peoples whose enmities go back
over centuries [sic]”).
A year ago the President was moving on
"five fronts’’ toward a political solution. His
advance having been blunted, he now has
recast his Mideast priorities: restoration of
the cease-fire and reduction of the arms
flow come first. No longer is the main pur-
pose in the talks with Moscow to “pursue
every possible avenue to peace.” It is a
more modest goal — to “stop escalating the
arms race.” The administration makes
clear, though, that it takes two — Moscow,
too — to de-escalate. Meanwhile, It offers
Israel important economic aid, reportedly
$100 million worth, to help Jerusalem bear
the giant extra costs of Its post-1967 defense.
For a year Mr. Nixon worked honorably
and hard for a settlement. He did not suc-
ceed; his search frightened Jerusalem into
a no-compromise corner and encouraged
Arabs to believe that American pressure on
Israel— rather than their own recognition
of Israel— was the path to peace. Certainly
the United States should continue canvass-
ing the diplomatic possibilities. But Its most
immediate and vital contribution is to lower
the level of regional violence, if possible by
means of agreement with the Russians,
otherwise by maintaining the military "bal-
ance” on its own. This is, as we understand
it, exactly what President Nixon has now
set out to do. It is possible, though far
from certain, that this approach may be
more effective than outside pressure In in-
ducing the parties to think of a settlement.
THE WASHINGTON POST.
The New English Bible
It will surprise no one, least of all the
translators of the just published New Eng-
lish Bible. If their rendering stirs up the
resentment of those devoted to the King
James Version. One need only remember
the furor caused by the publication of the
Revised Standard two decades ago. Once
again the old cry will be heard that the
new reading lacks the majesty, the rhetori-
cal beauty and the verbal felicity of the
older one. It Is easy to sympathize with
the critics. The great things In the King
James remain unsurpassed and wjll endure
wherever and as long as the English tongue
endures.
But it must not be forgotten that the
Initial impulse to the translation of the
Bible from the Hebrew and the Latin was
not literary or aesthetic. It was to make
the Word or God clear and accessible to
International Opinion
In the Phantoms 9 Shadow
Washington’s provisional refusal [to de-
liver Phantoms to Israel] Is part of an
infinitely broader framework, that of the
mysteries and manifold complexities that
govern American-Soviet relations. Wash-
ington actually Is making a discreet Invita-
tion to Moscow, which certainly is not eager
to run the risk of finding itself one day in
direct confrontation with the United States
on the Mldeastem battlefield.
The refusal to deliver Phantoms is an
Invitation to the UB-BJR. not to supply the
Arab states, namely the U-AJL, with M1G-23S,
which alone would permit these states to
hit Israel's vital centers. Evil gossips and
Peking will say that this Invitation Is col-
lusion and that Washington Is giving Mos-
cow an opportunity of not relinquishing the
finest pearls of its arsenal. In any case, this
part or the world more than ever appears
dependent on relations between the Big Two.
— From Combdt (Paris).
This promises to be a more unsettling
factor in tbe Middle East than the obvious
and understandable unevenhandedness of
U.S. policy in the area under previous
administrations.
— From the Buenos Aires Herald.
Nixon on Desegregation
* * *
President Nixon is seeking political Influ-
ence with the Arabs at the expense of
Israel's confidence in the United States.
President Nixon has taken adroit advan-
tage of ambiguity In the law regarding the
desegregation of schools to make a firm
stand for principle while leaving it to local
authorities — In tbe main the school districts
—to decide how fast to translate principle
into action. His message, which attacks the
"hypocrisy, the prejudice and the ignorance”
now prevailing on the issue, on the face of
it favors the North against the South, the
white suburbs against the cities, and the
rich against the poor. But It may be as-
sumed that within the area of flexibility
granted to school boards by the President's
“guidelines." local authorities will contrive
to give their residents a good deal of what
they want— which often is as much segrega-
tion as possible without actually breaking
the law.
—From the Times (London).
In the Internationa) Edition
Seventy-Five Years Ago Fifty Years Ago
March 26, 1895
PARIS— Those adventurers, many of whom are
of English extraction, who have gone or who
are on their way to Madagascar to take service
in the Howa army and oppose the French
expedition, are placing themselves, it must be
admitted, in a mast unpleasant position. It
is not very clear what advantages they are
likely to gain by their mad enterprises. If they
are taken prisoner they certainly will be shot.
March 26, 1924
NEW YORK— After a winter of strife among the
baseball magnates and with peace restored
once more to the ranks, that favorite sport ot
Amp. rtra.ns again looms up before the public's
eye. Baseball has had many successful seasons
in the past, but tbe forthcoming campaign for
the diamond warriors promises to be the
greatest- In the history of the national pastime.
Sixteen baseball clubs are In spring training.
4
‘Personally, fd Just as Soon Give Up Dominoes and Go Back to Craps •
Long Road’s Ending
By Joseph Alsop
those who wanted it. The King James Ver-
sion Is a monument to English letters, hut
It is foil of obscurities and clotted and diffi-
cult language. Since its day great strides
have been made in studies relating to the
Bible: in language, in manuscript recovery,
in comparative religion, in archaeology, in
general knowledge of the past
The New English Bible, the work of many
hands over 24 years and the first completely
new Protestant Bible in four centuries, in-
corporates these findings in a reading that
is contemporary, dear and quick without
loss of dignity. The Word does seem closer.
Eventually the success of this reading will
depend not on what critics think, but on
whether its readers feel that kinship that
an older generation felt for the Authorized
Version. In that regard, time alone will
make the final judgment of its qualities.
THE NEW YORK TIMES.
npAN TRU DISTRICT, Long An
Province. South Vietnam— Last
November, the Communist higher
command got a sadly shocking
suggestion from the Viet Coag
party committee of this district.
It happened because tbe South
Vietnamese government was about
to move to control Tan Tru’s 12
rich villages, for the first time in
nearly a decade.
To all appearances. Tan Tru was
then a VC fortress-district, as
Long An had once been a VC
fortress-province. Yet the bosses of
VC Scibregion Hi hastily decided
to reinforce the district with a
company of North Vietnamese
regular soldiers.
The Tan Tru party committee,
therefore, met to consider the best
use to make of these reinforce-
ments. In the upshot, the district
party secretary. Hai Ngoc, for-
warded a unanimous recommenda-
tion to Subregion XU— a recom-
mendation revealing that the sup-
posed fortress-district was all too
lightly defended.
The committee, in fact, proposed
to use the North Vietnamese
soldiers to fill the enormous, al-
ready-existing gaps in Tan Tru’s
Viet Cong command apparatus.
This is the so-called Viet Cong
infrastructure, or VCI. Managing,
directing and Insuring the enemy’s
control of the countryside are the
tasks of the VCI.
party members, born of the local
soil, with long experience in their
villages and districts. Tbe proposal
of Tan Tru’s party committee, to
use North Vietnamese to perform
many of these tasks therefore ran
flat counter to both precedent and
doctrine. It was refused, one- may
guess with horror, by the party
committee's bosses at Subregion HL
The Tan Tru party committee
then did the next best thing. It
used most of the North Viet-
namese in classic guerrilla rales,
as bodyguards for the Viet Cong
leaders of the district. Despite these
new guards, however. Party Sec-
retary Hal Ngoc was shortly killed
in action, and his military deputy,
Pham Van Bang, was also taken
prisoner. Bang told the foregoing
story.
Officer Defected
Prom end to end of South Viet-
nam, these tasks have always been
performed by native C ommuni st
Since November the vital Viet
Cong command structure in Tan
Tru has been simultaneously deci-
mated and rendered largely in-
operative. For example, the VC
party secretary of Due T h a nh Vil-
lage was picked up not long ago,
whereupon he sadly confessed that
he had been unable to commu-
nicate with the district party com-
mittee for three whole months.
The struggle for Tan Tru has
by no means ended— additional
North Vietnamese units have been
sent Into the district to bolster the
local VC. They are not happy. In-
deed the second In command at the
K-5 Battalion defected just a week
This is the grim ending of a
long road; since local recruits are
all but impossible to secure, and
native VC- VCI losses are very
heavy, there is no other possible
ending— unless Hanoi's war-plan-
ners simply resign themselves to
doing without any sort of guerrilla
structure in the countryside. And
the resulting transformation of the
Viet Cong into a largely synthetic
guerrilla movement, more and more
manned by Northerners with no
roots In South Vietnamese soil, is
a development of incalcul a ble sig-
nificance.
Wallace 9 s * National 9 Strategy
By Rowland Evans and Robert Novak
R OBERTSDALE. Ala.— Before an
all-white audience ol 5.000 at a
fish-fry in this south Alabama vil-
lage, climaxing his first full day
of campaigning. George C. Wallace
unveiled the strategy that holds
ft is only hope lor political survival.
The reason droves of newspaper
columnists from up North were
journeying to rural Alabama, said
Wallace, was their awareness that
the life or death of his “effort"
are at stake. “I want this effort
to continue,” he said. "The eyes of
the country are on you. You have
the power in your hands.”
Wallace's appeal for election as
governor of Alabama in terms of
national politics was fully expected
by the forces of his opponent and
erstwhile protfigfi. Gov. Albert
Brewer. What has surprised them
is the timing. They thought Wal-
lace would experiment with state
Issues for weeks before settling
down to the one strategy capable
of closing the gap between him
and Brewer by the May 5 Demo-
cratic primary.
Public Indifference
Indeed, Wallace's national strat-
egy is the cloud menacing the
Brewer camp's- euphoria, which
stems from amazingly favorable
polls plus defections of old Wallace
courthouse politicians. The dis-
quieting note is that even Alaba-
mans who no longer want Wallace
as governor still would support Mm
for president. Thus, Wallace must
prove that the only way they can
vote for him for president is to
make him governor again.
This means Wallace has come
full cycle in two months. When he
revealed early this year he might
run against Brewer to save his
third-party “movement," polls
showed public indifference. Brewer
then proclaimed that he, unlike
Wallace, had been a “fulltime”
governor. TO the glee of the
Brewer camp, Wallace retorted
lamely he had been a “double time”
governor. That framed a debate
over wbo was the most competent
governor, an area where Wallace’s
emotional appeal would count for
little.
Now, Wallace is back to a na-
tional strategy. “You and me," he
tells audiences with' dubious logic,
“are responsible for Hubert Hum-
phrey not being president of the
United States, and -that's some-
thing.” Because of Wallace, Presi-
dent Nixon's speeches "look like
they were written here in Roberts -
dale.”
Thus, were he defeated far gov-
ernor now, the South would lose
Its Vigilant watchdog on the Nixon
administration. In coming weeks,
Wallace will be increasingly explicit
that his repudiation here would
convince Mr. Nison that the South
was in his pocket lor 1972 and.
therefore, he could move leftward
to seek liberal votes.
layman who brings an evangelistic
style to the campaign stump and
puhs it off nicely. “If you’ve been
to your capltol lately,” he orates,
"you don't have to see these agents
of comzption H ---presmnably influ-
ence peddlers— “going up and down
the halls." With his new state mo-
tor pool, says the young governor,
"you don't see state cars at the
football game or the beach nice you
used to.”
Brewer's concern about this tac-
tic is manifest. Implying that his
soft-spoken approach is more ef-
fective nationally than Wallace's
bravado. Brewer suggests to cam-
paign rallies that it was his lob-
bying on the Senate floor that
passed the S tennis school desegre-
gation amendment— a boast so out
of character for Brewer that a
worried supporter relayed warning
that he was sounding like George.
But Brewer knows be cannot
outdo Wallace as protector of the
South in national politics. In-
stead. he must concentrate on
bringing “a moral tone" to Mont-
gomery— in Implicit contrast to
what prevailed under George and
Lurleen Wallace.
Brewer is a prominent Baptist
Racial Factors
Courthouse Square crowds in
Greenville and Evergreen— sup-
posedly Wallace country — liked
Brewer's good-government spiel.
But whether they like it well
enough to retire Wallace from
politics depends on one question:
Just how decisive racial factors still
axe in Alabama politics.
Although both Wallace add
Brewer sound the same indictment
of federal meddling in Alabama's
schools, there is a difference. Wal-
lace remains a true believer in
segregated schools and talks that
way privately. But Brewer feels
segregation as such is dead, and
Alabama should get on to other
business. In this campaign. Brewer
is betting that the people of
Alabama agree.
There was evidence last week
that Brewer might be right. Even
here in Wallace country, audience
response - to Wallace was muted.
But after one speech at the Na-
tional Guard Annoy in Foley, a
grinning tow-headed boy came up
to Wallace and implored: “Gov-
ernor, don’t let ’em put the nig-
gers in our schools."
If enough adult Alabamans see
this as their paramount Interest
and want to keep Wallace as their
watchdog on Nixon, they might
Just vote to put him in the gover-
nor’s mansion, no matter what the
polls sow show.
Getting the Message
Of the Mail Strike
By James Reston
\
TVIEW YORK— The striking mall*.
men have delivered at least
one message to the American peo-
ple, and the Washington politicians.
They have said loud and clear that
Institutions that ignore legitimate
grievances, even if they are clothed
in the majesty of the government,
win be challenged and even defied.
President Nixon has accepted the
challenge. He bos said, quite right-
ly, that the authority of the gov-
ernment must be upheld, by mili-
tary force if necessary, but tbe
message of the mail carriers re-
mains. They will get by illegal
defiance the pay raises they were
refused by legal argument, and
we will get our mall, but the bade
questions of respect for the au-
thority of American institutions
will still not be resolved, In fact,
there may be even less respect for
principle, far the settlement will
have been achieved by force.
This issue goes far beyond the
mailmen. It is central to all ques-
tions of freedom and authority, and
respect for institutions, now under
challenge in the church, the uni-
versities, the government, and even
in the family. The f iiwri^p pgntal
question is whether institutions,
claiming tbe right of authority,
have the wisdom to recognize and
remove legitimate grievances in
time. If they do not, they are
clearly in danger of losing respect
and having to use force In order
to avoid anarchy.
The men who control the traffic
into the airports of the nation are
as angry as the New York mailmen,
only they are more sophisticate
about it. And we are loitering
down into another crisis in a le*
days with the ra Broad workers.
Accordingly, we could settle the
mall strike in a few days and have
no mail to deliver because the air.
lines and the railroads wouldn’t be
working. The Congress has trifled
with the railroadmen ns it haa
trifled with the mailmen, and prob-
ably won't deal with that problem
either until it is confronted with
another potential calamity.
ago, after six years service in
South Vietnam. But the K-5 Bat-
talion and the sapper company
still do their best.
Meanwhile, something else has
also happened in Tan Tru that is
downright startling. The use of
North Vietnamese as guards -for
the district’s VC leaders was only
the thin end of the wedge. In a
rather random manner, but In most
of the remaining guerrilla squads
and platoons of the hamlets and
villages, North . Vietnamese soldiers
are now being used to fill gaps
in the r an to; .
Before long, furthermore, one
can predict that the party bosses
of Subregion m will have to
reverse their November decision. In
other words, besides using North
Vietnamese as substitute guerrillas,
they will have to begin inserting
North Vietnamese to keep alive
the continuously depleted Viet
Cong command structure, the VCI.
Played Politics
The Prescient and the Congress
did not recognize the legitimate
grievances of t- he iwa.i ] Tm»w in ■fc ftnp
They trifled with them, and play-
ed politics with them. They are
now insisting on respect for their
authority, as they must In the
crisis, but they did not use their
authority to be fair to the mail-
men before their authority was
challenged-
Unless this lesson of the moil
strike is learned, we are just at
the beginning of a much larger
crisis. There are 2.75 million civil-
ians working for the federal gov-
ernment, and 9.5 million others
working under no-strike civil ser-
vice rules far state, city and county
authorities. No doubt they, if not
the politicians, are learning the
lessons of the mail strike.
The state and municipal hospital
workers In many ways have more
serious grievances than the mail-
men. They are seriously under-
paid and don’t understand why
they are so underpaid at a time
when hospital rooms in the big
cities cost from $60 to J100 a day.
Crisis of Authority
It Is true, as the President has
said, that there is a criria of ay.
tbority in America today. All in-
stitutions are under attack, and
particularly the institutions of gov-
ernment, but we have to ask why
Nixon wants to uphold the digni-
ty and authority of our Institutions,
but nominates men for the Supreme
Court of tbe United States who
affront members ot the Senate and
the bar.
The Congress resents the' chal-
lenge of the mailmen, but. ignores
their Justified grievances. Congress-
men are proud of their institution
and reseat challenges to its au-
thority. but support an aged speak-
er, John McCormack, who has out-
hved ft is usefulness and cannot uu
his authority effectively or even
uphold the essential respect of the
House.
Accordingly, while it Is easy and
even right to support the President
and the Congress for' opposing the
wiRttmen in the present crisis, it fc
only lair to analyze why the crisis
occurred in the first place.
In his well-publicized memoran-
dum to the President, Daniel
Patrick Moynlhan said: "m one
form or another, all of the major
domestic problems facing you derive
from the erosion of the authority
of the institutions of American so-
ciety ... AH we know is that tbe
sense of institutions being legiti-
mate— especially the Institutions of
government — is the glue that balds
societies together. When it weak-
ens. things came unstuck."
Well, they are unstuck now.
There Is indeed an. “erosion of tbe
authority of the institutions of
American sadaty*— ■ particularly the
institutions of government. The
mailmen, wrong as they are, have
mftifg the point dear. They are
tnrtsting that governments must be
responsive to the legitimate griev-
ances of the people if they are to
be respected and obeyed.
Letters
Lars 1 Sjomwb Better
By God, I have been to sea
these 30 years and if, as you say,
just two men can steal and sail
away one big ship like “Columbia
Eagle.” then my name isn’t Lars
Svensen!
So I tell Capt. Christjensen,
“By damn. Sir, TU write and tell
the newspaper what i think!” and
he says, "Lara, you axe a stupid
man!” This is a lie, far I speak
five languages— Danish, English.
Swedish, Finnish, German and
French. And they cannot tell me,
Lars Svensen. that if they steal
this ^Columbia Eagle” filled with
bombs and give it to the country
two days before the 'putsch." there
is not “something rotten there in
Cambodia,” hey?
By the way, I’ve been to the
U-SA. ten times and my favorite
town is Upper West Side New
York.
LARS SVENSEN, 2d Mate
TJS. Astrid Maersk.
Algiers.
Scope of Government
promote the general welfare, and
secure the Blealags of liberty to
ourselves and our Posterity, do cr-
daln and : . .
These purposes or functions
would seem to include some re-
dress of the "social grievances"
(including those of Negroes) which •
Mr. McNally feels are beyond the
pale of governmental action.
Disciplining its citizens necee- :
- sarily includes punishment lor
overt violence when those
responsible can be found. Bo for
as I khow this is done without j
exception. But that does not end .
the disciplinary function of govern- '
it must also discipline its 1
citizens by making unlawful all ‘
overt but nonviolent actions by-
which pm* group of citizens limits .-
liberty and/or justice for another
group.
With wise and courageous ex-
ercise of both types of citizen
discipline, we may yet build in thd
United States a society where our
legal a nd penal resources will be
unstrained.
. JACKLYN SANDERS.
The Hague.
In his attack on James Reston
(Letters, March 20), Raymond Mc-
Nally appears unaware of or In
disagreement with the scope of
American government as defined
in the Preamble to our Constitu-
tion. Mr. McNally limits the basic
function of a “proper” government
to protection of "life and property
by using physical force, only in
retaliation, against those who in-
itiate or threaten Us use against
others, whatever the excuse may
be.”
To quote the Preamble as re-
minder: “We the people of the
United states, in Order to form a
more perfect Union., establish Jus-
tice. Insure domestic Tranquility,
provide for the common defense.
Oddballs and Kooks
I would like to point out to Miss
i.frida Freedman (Letter, March 9»
that Spiro T. Agnew does not need
to be "chied" .that “the people" ,
Include "oddballs, kooks, and effete
snobs.” Obviously, he is well aware i
of the fact. !
What he is. pointing out, and •
rightly, in my opinion, is that tbe
"oddballs, kooks and effete snobs'
are only a small fraction of “tbe
people” and that the rest of vs
should evaluate all the noise they
make at its real value, which, when .
you think about it, is not a bell of
a lot. t,
JF. LYNAM. ..
Paris.
SRBBRBKBUL
1 teralb ^sil m* ^Tribune
3 ».
Pu&Esbad atyfaTlN NcwYbtfcl&Ms wl Tbe VtabhgtRi Post:
‘ ,-v n ■
V,.
Chairman Co-Chairmen.
n„ Katharine Graham
John Hay Whitney Arthur Ochs SolAerger
Publisher
Robert T. MacDonald
Editor ' General Manager ■
Murray QL Weiss Andre Bing
George W. Sana. Hanagfac Editor; 807 Verger, Assistant tfumttf W®"
Publishes end piloted or interoAUcnal Internatio nal fiereifl
Harold Tribune at 21 Ruo de Born. ****
Paris-ae Tel; 23W8-60. Total 90.860 L* OtMSUQZ da is
Herald. Parts. Cottas: . Herald, port*, cation; Walter X.
BuDKriptum
2 mas
SBLoa 13 mas ]
Algeria ta)r).._-„pr
78.30
149 JO
-284.00
Austria iitrl ...Seta
*20.00
600.00 1626.00
Belgians BJT
775.00 1460.00 3750.00
Cyprus idlrt .... *
33 50
<4.50
65 00
Denmark lalrlDXr
12L0B
23100
439 00
Prune*. ...Fr
es .00
132J0
335.00
Germany DA4
58.00
10G.M
300 00
Great Bnc. talri £
8.13.6
10.66
IB 17 0
Greet* talri .JDi
547
1047
2000
Iran <Alri ........ 3
23JS0
44 W
65.00
Ireland >air/._. £
i 13 a
>0.6.6
W.17.0
Israel lalrl- Jt
30.60
39.00
73.05
Italy Un
9700
18300
34400
KuvaU tali 3
46-00
88.00
167 U0
Lebanon fair}..— *
33.50
*4-50
6600
Libya- (alrl .....X
3M0
44 JO
85.00
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Soburtptioo
uuemDours MPr- T™
Morocco inlrWA . «■«»
Netherlands — JF»
Narva; tain . JfJSF ^^5?
Pakistan (oiri .. 4- • A* ® JJrJJ
Portugal
Saudi Arawa tairj5 # ~«»
South A!W« Hurl*
Spain (HrL-.PWia.HSO _•
Sweden laltJSwAT '
SrJtoertead «»»•_
Thailand
Tunisia talri * - «■“ X
Turkey <ztrl- — i* - \ 2fo
dab lain ^K:..£S
Other AurotEsudrl'*-
Knr nbscrlbars are entitled t« an Introduotet? P*.**** 4 ."^' • -
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*•• ET
Afro Looks for
Men and Women—
Black and White
• By Nadeaue Walker
f'OSDONi March 25.— Splint-
JLi ere. London's first and only
Made and white sod unisex
: jjgfnjresseis* shop comhined
-itb aft art gaEeiy. to a ehlp
00 an OW American .block— the
Crtf CaJftP Shop in New York.
OM of the three Splinters
^jrtjgrs here Is -Walter Fuun-
Knx a ,of the Coif Camp
gjvjp— cpe of New York's top
5S£j««sera. Ano t h er- Amer ica n
Ted Wynne, 30, former
-yj pf gp assistant director for
zjriBB. International, is in the
g -Hct as venture, along with
S^wn : Isaacs, 38, who was
ton in Guyana but brought up
to Britain.. -
- , 5ie only . white - hairdresser
«pBnten> has at the moment is
' Stoackell. . formerly at
Royal Garden Hotel. He
arifs models for Nova.
- although white customers are
eg welcome as black (“so far,
thpy’re about half and half,"
. cjjs Ted - Wynne) ' Splinters
gpp ^ifn-a in hair straightening
cpfl frfra wigs. This may sound
-Bke a contradiction (why de-
jnzz your hair only to stick a and womi
kinky w^ on?), bat Mr. Wynne - care of a)
opiates that it's really a very in the sac
practical proposition. "It takes ert is the
a iQQg time to comb through where you
frfnky hair in the morning, so p&istzng a
it's much easier to wear your shampoo,
'own -straight and . have an, Afro Some of
INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1970
.PARI
Pag* 1
Three looks
from Splinters
Hob ert Diboe.
Easter Eggs
Frenchwomen Invest in a Club
mada of solid stono
and gold bound
Lots of white customers not
pniy need and use the straight-
ening service, but buy the Afro
«jgs as wen. The unisex aspect
g set unique, for there are -a
lew other salons where men
rand' women client s are
care of at the same .time and
in the same room. But Splint-
ers is the only salon in London
where you can buy an original
painting while waiting tor your,
shampoo.
Some of the pictures are by
director Walter -Fountaine.
Another Ampriram painter
who shows there is Alice Wil-
liams. The “hrowsery** also
sells original, hand-made jewel-
ry from Nigeria and other ac-
cessories.
The Afro wigs, in many
colons and as magnificent as
lions manes, are made of light-
weight dynel and cost from 16
to 26 guineas ($40 to $63).
■ Among Splinters’ early clients
were Madeliene Bell of the Blue
Mink pop group, Doris Troy, who
records for the Beatles' Apple
TahpT aTirt Tnriinn model Ch&Il-
drika.
The salon, located on Maddox
Street in Mayfair, alms at keep-
ing prices reasonable (it’s “two
h eads for the price of one” on
Mondays and Tuesdays .i while
“creating hig h fashion in relax-
ed (straightened) hair where
such a standard was not pre-
viously available.”
Ted Wynne says the idea for
Splinters was bom in 1967 when
his pretty black wife. Lucy,
complained that she couldn't
get her hair done properly any-
where in London.
Fountaine is now considering
changing the name of Coif
Camp in New York to Splinters,
By Hebe Dorsey
■pAEIS, March 25.— Anemone,
* a slight brunette, raised
her toIcb and said — ever so
shyly: "I believe we should buy
Brasseries et Glacieres dTndo-
chine. I've been told it’s a
very good stock.” You could
have heard a pin drop-
For An&none is not only a
member of the Femmes cte
Velours Investment club, the
latest thing in Frenchwomen's
dubs. She is also the wife of
V&lery Glscard dTktaing, French
Finance Minister.
Mrs. Discard d’Estaing and 14
other women were meeting as
they do once a month at the
home of their president, Marie-
Yvettc Aussibal, and all the
ladles were quietly talking about
the stock market.
The chib idea came from
America, where there are many
similar groups. The first French-
women to visualize the potential
of women investors here was
Roselyne Pierre, wife of a
French stockbroker. Mrs. Pierre
began working on her project
after the regulations were re-
laxed (in 1968) to permit women
to observe trading at the Bourse
(stock market).
A year ago, Mrs. Pierre
rounded up 15 women friends
and founded the first club.
Now. there are. 50 branches In
Paris. The idea, popularized by
television and newspaper arti-
cles, is fast spreading to the
French provinces.
A Piggy Bank
The Femmes de Valeur are
not in the game to make big,
fast and adventurous money.
They want to understand the
French economy and. by and
by, build up a long-range piggy
bank.
The other night, Mrs. Glscard
MILAN.
Two Flights Down to Modern Art, Ancient History
By Cima Star
'--V, jypLAN.— In AX>. 1090, the
M- Knights of San .Sepolcro
-~Xv. decided to commemorate their
recent return, from the Crusades
-■ ^ by building a church like those
•* that they had seen in Jerusa-
■-^Zlem. They chose a spot' in the
“ heart of old Milan, and as hap-
j-tr pened so often in Italy, built
: :» their church over a pre-existing
structure, including the forom
romanum of Mediolanum, as
Milan was known in Caesar's day.
A few hundred years after
the church was built, Leonardo
•. :c3t 4a : . Vinci made architectural
= (havings of it which are now
:M38 in' the Louvre, and helped to
supervise its restoration. (At
l:- . feast one of the frescoes re-
:.-£2 £■* cenUy uncovered in the crypt
=• wm done by Da Vinci students.)
. ripsvAnd a century or so later, a
; '.'.R^Jocal sculptor created a manger
.- scene of terra cotta figures,
.si^almost lifesise (some experts
r^'feel they may in fact have been
:;i:*viifestee lor the period), and
■ ^another carved the likeness of
. tsjpsari Borromeo— all of them now
the crypt
y iV And now these figures and
*•' ‘A.frescoes. are again visible. The
V^i present Knights of San Sepol-
' *ro have financed the partial
frestoration of the crypt beneath
the church built by their fare-
Iw®
W-wmk-
Vv.-»-v ;*"•<& ■
a
• - r ••
La. Cripta
Gallery has
paving stones
from Roman
foram.
The pillars may
be from an
ancient Roman
temple.
Uirio PtrottL
fathers. This is where you will
find La Cripta Gallery (in Piazza
San Sepolcro), itself as mucii
a work of art as a showplace
far young artists.
Today, it takes Just two
flights of stairs to go back 2.000
years. The floor of the gallery
is composed of the original
large, rough paving stones from
the forum romanum. In stately
procession, two rows of smooth
stone pillars, which may have
been part of an ancient Roman
temple, support the gracefully
arched high ceiling. .
The gallery was opened only
recently, and many of the
objects found there have not
yet been precisely d a s s i fle d.
“This probably was not a crypt.”
points out D'Alma Folco Zam-
belli, director of the gallery.
“But see how it is shaped, like
an early Christian church, per-
haps one in Byzantine style.
with the apse here and the
entry there..."
The gallery has that rever-
berating silence one feels in
solid stone cellars. The frescoes
of the Leonardo school with an
Image of the beatific Madonna
still visible have been uncovered,
as has another fresco dating
before 1400.
“We really didn't touch any-
thing,'’ says the director, “just
cleaned it up.”
On the curved ceilings, clean-
ing has revealed decorations at
least 400 years old. "Every-
where you touch, the ceiling
has been painted,” says Mrs.
ZambeUi, “perhaps not by &
famous artist, but stfil they are
enjoyable”
Behind a gauzy curtain Is the
figure of San Borromeo, kneel-
ing before a sarcophagus nearly
1,000 years old. Another thin
curtain veils two sets . of terra
cotta figures — one set, thought
to have been part of a 16th-
century manger scene, is
grouped around the figure of
the dying Madonna.
There are probably more sur-
prises to come: several stairways
were blocked off three to four
hundred years ago.
Only half of the crypt has
been restored. Funds must still
be found for the rest. Part of
the profit from sales of paint-
ings and sculpture goes into a
restoration fund. Meanwhile,
the Knights of San Sepolcro
are trying to raise more.
Mrs. Glscard d'Estaing
d'Estaing and 13 other women
met in Miss Aussibal’s large,
modem living room, overlooking
the Seine qT>fi the Eiffel Tower.
The clubwomen, whose ages
range from 30 and up. included
two secretaries, the wife of a
journalist, a housewife and a
lady simply described as a
ecu re (widow i . Miss Aussibal,
a cheerful woman in her 30s
was a good choice for president
—she knows quite a bit about
the market, working aa she does,
as a registered representative
for H. Hentz & Co.
All the ladies sat with a pad
in one hand and a drink in the
other. Mrs. Giscard d'Estaing
passed around a memo on the
day's topic: Ic biUm (the corpo-
rate balance sheet). Mean-
while. the president was col-
lecting the dues: 100 francs
(S18> each, which goes into
an investment pool. Then a
blonde woman in her early
thirties got up, wearing ultra
serious glasses and a gray suede
mini-skirt. She spoke about
le bilan — and mysterious it was.
She also explained figures on
a blackboard and even Mrs. Gis-
card d’Estaing was working
wrinkles on her forehead.
When the going got rough,
Miss Aussibal would take over
and translate le bilan into
household terms.
“ Voila .** she would say. “Sup-
pose your mother-in-law lent
you money to buy an apart-
ment. That would have to go
into le passlj inabilities). "
VERSAILLES
<r dfl
The second hall of the two-
hour long conference dealt with
the stocks on hand (the club
has $3,000 invested). The dub-
women. Marie- Yvette admitted,
had done some pretty emotional
and erratic buying here and
there. De Beers, for instance,
they bought because they
couldn't resist the idea that dia-
monds are a girl’s best friend.
But not on the atockmarket, ap-
parently. They also bought
Most et Chandon because of
the Dior perfume tie-up. But
otherwise, it sounded terribly
serious.
Each woman in turn was ask-
ed to report on the stocks for
which die was responsible-
each is assigned one of the
club stocks which she must fol-
low on the market. One stocky
lady in a big flowery pullover
said the oil situation was not
good right now. Another point-
ed out that Moullnex’s sales
were doing fine In the United
States since Moulinex changed
the color of their kitchen uten-
sils from red to yellow.
And how do French husbands
feel about it all? “In the be-
ginning.'' Mrs. Giscard d'Estaing
said, “they're a bit skeptical."
But do wives ask advice from
their husbands? "Occasionally."
she said. “After all. they've got
to help us— a little bit."
Swiss Wins Prize
HAMBURG, March 25 (UPI).
—Dr. Denis de Rougement, the
Swiss author, has been named
the winner of 1970 Robert
Schuman prize for his work
towards the ideal of European
unity. The FVS Foundation,
which awards the 25.000 marks
■ $6,830) prize, said that Dr. dc
Rougemont was chosen for his
dedication to European unity.
He is the director of the “Centre
Europe en de la Culture" in
Geneva.
or stiver bound $ 32
JEANfiTfi
watchmaker-Jeweler
70, fg St-Honore - PARIS
Anj. 12-33
GIRDLES - BRASSIERES
BATHING SUITS
to measure
/
I // a«t n
Rr 14, rue CUmam -Marat
359 (ELY) 62-32
BERLT5 ONLY RETAIL SHOP
IN PARIS
NEV rows OST1N6USNED
HOTEL^ARLYLE
35 stories of luxurious
ircommod etions. Conve-
nient to shopping, art
galleries and museums,
theatres and business.
Three fine restaurants.
HADim ATONE AT Till ft,
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CABLE: THECAJO.VLE NEWVOW
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BOTTLED IN SCOTLAND BY:
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TNC ORIGINAL
HOUSE of LORDS J
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SCOTCH WHISKY
WHERE TO STAY
AFGHANISTAN J |t£ FRANCE 1 HOLLAND PORTUGAL
KABUL LA TIN QUA&TER
tCTEX-CONZZNENXAIt Panoraaio riew. HOTEL PIEBW1GE. BmsQrant-Penslan.
ODD Rms. Air-con d. pool Contact any 61bts/53 Bd. Salat- Oermala - 033-42-66.
PsnAm office for reservations. Reasonable rates for room & breakfast
4c full board, also longer stay.
pining osfc Perfect Vegetables in England
gulf
.--.art
i. By Naomi Bariy
TONDON, March 25.— As soon
Ti as V restaurant is slightly
<& fits beaten track, people
' s.’.tfififl te.be nervous about quaU-
V'. ^'-TSAi hi not very logical, if
"“*■ yon stag, to think about It. What
..Lt^-qcigjhbmbood possibly have
to the standards of a
M.w&th the effhrt to per-
n^ jj^gbetant cabbie to keep
v iwJdnfcjSoa: Didler. in a section
<£-Lo$foJi k n o wn as Little Ve-
>■> ~ appellation comes from
presence of Regent’s Canal).
This an attractive residential
ana, home of a group of un-
' ostentatious writers and artists
and of lady Diana Duff Cooper.
' At nights when traffic lets up.
tHarerer, ft is only a 10-minute
. tai drive from ’ Park Lane.
"! Didler is a most professional
Doan .restaurant of the restful
i %nn that in duces around-the-
!p fcMe eonweraitloxL There is a
’ small menu of unusual dishes.
i ft even boasts the rarity of
JWfeetly cooked vegetables, a
department where most Brlt-
kh . restaurants go completely
V> pot.
The three headliners this week
! vere a boat/ & la Flomande, a
matelote mariniire, and a bro-
t *ette of scampi. The scampi,
t and motet had been
■Iterated with grilled mush-
noms and were served wfth an
va lient rice enriched with a
. f fPW dollops of nnishroom puree,
j purde had a tantalizing
And hard to define extra flavor
• came from & savant dos- i
.■ i^C of oregano, fennel powder, I
the faintest addition of i
coconut. It wasn’t das-
but it was very good.
Jjhe matelote was a fragrant
Sgfitfe of firm-fleshed white
and seafood presented in
paring .pf saffron rice. The tend-
?AH1S amusements
Mving room
A*t Blamwa* Trl*. Aaran ftrfdxw* j
» i • *w an- iMfto *Lsr, asJ*. cum, Sm,
er beef had been prepared in
a full-bodied sauce of Guinness
stout.
The Vegetables
The waiter brought a large
platter of assorted vegetables —
cauliflower, baby marrows, egg-
plant, and small fondant pota-
toes. The marrows, instead of
being cooked to the usual mush,
maintained a pleasant crunch.
The eggplant suggested lands
of the sun.
Among the most popular dishes
on the basic menu are chicken
breast in mustard sauce with
a point of Pernod and duc klin g
with chestnuts and black sau-
sages.
Although Didier subtitles it-
self a French restaurant, the
chef is Scottish and his assis-
tant chef Is Italian. The two
co-partners are Richard ■ .Wil-
liams-EUis, an Englishman, and
Bruno Conci, an Italian who
formerly had a well-patronized
London restaurant called Bru-
no One.
Mr. Conci and Mr. Wi lli a ins -
Ellis, both residents of Little
Venice, decided the neighbor-
hood could use a good restau-
rant, Mr. Willtains-Effis is a
stockbroker, and his wife runs
a handsome book shop next
door to file Didier. All felt it
would be a convenience to have
some place pleasant to eat and
entertain near home. When a
shoemaker's shop became va-
cant, they decided to take the
plunge. The decor is a smart
conversion of an old house.
Didier opened last July and
has been running mainly on
contented word-of -mouth rec-
ommendation. Forty-two people
raw be welcomed on two floors.
There is a small rear patio
which will be put into use when
and if London’s weather proves
propitious.
This summer Little Venice
is ptnwniwg a festival with an
open - air art exhibition and
fireworks from the barges on.
the canal;. For visitors who
would like to become acquainted
with a real London neighbor-
hood, as contrasted with the
present artificiality of Chelsea,
Didier would be an excellent
introduction. To enl a r ge the ex-
perience. there is an attractive
pub. the Warwick Castle, next
door.
Didier, 5 Warwick Place. Lon-
don W.9 Telephone: 286-7464.
Dinner only from 7 psn. until
midnight. Closed Sundays. Aver-
age meal with a carafe o J
burgundy, about £3 (S7 20).
WHERE TO STAY IN THE UAA.
HOTEL DELHG ‘
Hotel, de lax<
down to ra tit
rendezvous 0
cocktail ber. „
ly. Telex: GJ 234 and Panam 220.
s':-rg£&i*ys:iil ausxhxa
BEBWANG/Tyrol (4,4 29 ftj
WHITE STAR l nr. Munich), ex. shlutt.
S lilta. beauty (arm. sun terrace. T. 28a.
SAL2BUBG
GRAND HOTEL WINKLER. Every room
with hath and *c. Restaurant. Bar
CAFE WINKLER. Built In one OX the
most beautiful spots In the world.
VIENNA
PARIS SUBURB
TSST^GERMAm-m-lATZ
PA VILLON HENE1-TT****A. Just out-
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reputed restaur. Historical. T.: 98S-30-6&
FREKCU RIVIERA
0B-EZE Bord-de-Mer
CAP ESTEL HlLScfcScsfc. Formerly Princess
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Oa Rtttoi house Square
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tinental culalnc. heated poo ; . “OP-
ping arcade. Cable: FLAQTELS
MALAYSLA
KUALA LUMPUR
FEDERAL HOTEL, 450 air-con d. naa
Oman. * Cblaese enbui+podl Danu-
lng, banquet halls. Coral Bar Mhr
Tnk.bath.ChL: FEDSEOTEL-TeLarroL
PHILIPPINES
HOTEL PILIPINAS. Overlooking histo-
ric y m iii» pay. 478 alr-cond. rma. *
suites with bath. E&iJ?
Koras Bird. Cable.' BOFU, MAHTLA-
TATWAN
TAIPEI
AMBASSADOR HOTEL. City center, 300
air win d, rms.. 5 bars. 5 rest.. 3 mefat -
clabs. swlmpooL Cable: AMRAfBAlri l*
president hotel, truly nzs class.
Finest restaoranu. Orchid Room. Bar:
Champagne room alt ely ent .: 3 4 hr .
coIleesliDpAbPBBBDBHELTAZPEL
TAIWAN gift SHOP. Teak 2nm. earr-
ings. Coral 69 Chang Shan B4. sec. X
THAILAND
BANGKOK
ERAWAN HOTEL — Luxury, hotel
wnh 200 fuiiy air-eon flj dotted rooms,
fj mated in Bangkok’s business centre.
Cable: EEAWAN B ANGKOK.
ORIENTAL: Exotlo teariotta Sires-
side hotel, pool, panoramic view,
troin elegant Normandie Grill: C a bl e
ORIENHOTEL BANGKOK- Telex: 3344
mandarin HOTEL. 310 alMmnd. de-
luxe rooma- =4-hr ccHeesbop. resL
box nightclub, shopping area, pool
Cable; MANDOTEU Telex: 3334.
NABAI HOTEL. 500 deluxe
CENTRAL, 2d catBR. PL Bourse. Ah comx.
Mod. terms. TeL 1180 SO. cables: Tel central.
METROPOLE. The leading hotel oIBelrlum.
PL de BronckAre. TeL: 17X3DO. Telex: 31234.
WESTBUBT HOTEL DE LUXE
TEU: 13-64-30. - Teles: 320CL
Opposite sahena Air TermlnaL
y: iinwMARR
COPENHAGEN
ggjigagsigM France
7S-PAB1S
OPERA DISTRICT
ATHENES** 21 R« d ALhtaeS. 874-00-65.
Quiet, dble cm- w. bath/Vhoww: 87 to 810.
—TUILE&IES-PL. VENDOSSE DISTRICT—
NORSANDy ****?. 7 We de rEchelif.
NrJ^um-TullBrie* Gard. Bar. OPR. O4-C0.
- CHAM PS-SLY SEES DISTRICT
CALIFORNIA. 16 Ruo de Bern. Pint cUSOO
rooma-Regt. Snack. Amer-Bar. ELTS8-00.
ETOJLS DISTRICT —
MIAMI HOT^***56 »w fl^Acadas.
New. Quiet. Cbtnf. Ho m e li ke. ET0.36-2E.
Beono mlMd: 1-3 no. apis. w. bath.Mtch.
ONION***A. 44 Rtw^niclin i Ara KaA-
ber)^pL lA3rms.,bath, latch. EXE. 14-oS.
EIFFEL TOWER DISTRICT — —
rPLAZA MIRABEAU * J ** A “i
10 Are. Smfle-Zola Il5ei. 250-72-00
%-S-S ns. Apia., hath, kitchen, fnd*.
Dally /monthly. Bold service provided.
TSOCADERO DISTRICT
DEUECRE DE LONGCHAHP. 100 Rue de
cds^fiiU or a
GERMAN T 1ZZ
BADEN-BADEN
BRENNER’S P.VRKHOTEL, Uchuntaler
Alice. Leading hotel. Open all year.
BAD NAUHEIM
HILBERT’S P.VRKHOTEL. leading hotel.'
Open all year. TL: 2845/4B Tx.: 0415514
BERLIN
BRISTOL HOTEL KEHPXNSKL lead, notel
Rea: Pans S2S 4300. Berlin 8810691
NEW: HOTEL PALACE u Europa Center.
Restaurant. Bar Oongr- & Bsoqnet lac.
T.: 130241. Ts-:lB4S25. Cable: Enmalace
DUSSELDOBF
KBEXDENBACHBB HOF. Highest stanaard
& hosp. Atr-co nq. "La Paleue’’ nightclub.
HOTEL 1XTEB-CONT1NENXAL. Inti, atan-
dardipers. touch, air-ccud.. POOL sauna.
R»U-conrse. T.: *34848. TX: 8584601.
H&MBUHO
ATLANTIC HOTEL. Located on Alner
Lake TeL: 24-80-01. Teletype: 02-12-387.
MUNICH
BATERXSCHEE HOF. LestUnE- All com*.
Telephone: 22-88-71. Teirnype: 0523409
REGINA PALACE. The favorite hotel of
KnpIlnN -» p»nlrln [- people. Wtirimlliim pl g.
NOERDZJWG2H ON THE ROMANTIC WAT
HOTEL SONNE. Room with bath. W.C I
Top clues cuisine. ToL: *067.
NUBEMBEBO
GRAND HOTEL. 130 baths. OT-contL. Res-
taurant: 60 car. Known for personal sarv.
aOT H E N BUBS OB DER TAUBER
COLDRKER HIRSCH. in cL Pac. Tauber
Talley. Quiet loc. 145 beds, well recom.
AMSTERDAM
VICTORIA HOTEL***** Center 200
rms. with bath. Famous grilL Tx: 123-45
BAARH (18-mL from Amatardsm)
CASTLE HOTEL DB HOOGE-VUtJKSCHE.
The romantic castle in the woods.
QNDHOVEN
GO. HOTEL DE COCAGXE. Luxe, center.
2 rest. Bar, Oarage T.: 69288. Ts.: 51245.
HH.VERSUM (17 miles ham Amsterdam)
GRAND HOTEL GOOXL&ND. Tbs hotel
of the future In Holland of today.
LEIDEN
HOLIDAY INN LEIDEN, near Amsterdam
Airport. North Sea 6s The Hague. En-
closed pool and sauna. Children under
12 tree. It sharing parents' room.
Holiday Inn. P.O. Box 150. Leiden
Telephone: 01710-15232. Telex: 33541.
THE HAGUE
AMBASSADOR. Nr. Peace Palace, suites,
grill life music. Prem. Park. T.: 11 7700.
HOTEL DBS INDES. 1st dun center town.
Teletype: 31186. Cable: Rcy. Tel.: 184545.
ROTTERDAM
ATLANTA. Completely renovated. Right In 1
Center. T.: 11 0420 Telex: 21505. Pfcg. lac
SAVOY HOTEL. Newest. City Center. Bar. I
Tel.: 139280. Telex: 21555. Parking tan.
cSg!5I5^ ggj
ALVOR (Altjorvo)
TORBALTA APPARTHOTEL New. on the
beach, rcsl, club. pool, bolte. waterskL
near golf Bs tennis. Full board all tact.
Nov to June, S5.50; July to Oct_ sSper
person. Hescrv. Cblc: ERANA LISBON.
PASO (Alqnrvw)
EVA, 1st el All rms. w., bath. rest., grill.
Pool 6s beach . Pull board 815. single 87.
MONTES DE ALVOB (Algarve)
PEMTNA GOLF HOTEL. Deluxe air-cond.
resL-grilL nightclub, golf course, rid-
ing. ten., pools. Cable: Pcnlno PorUmao.
PRAIA D. ANA - LAGOS (Algorro)
Golfino HOTEL, 1st cl., near uearh.
m-a view. rest., boltu wul.-aki WINTER
- GREAT BRITAIN
CADOGAN HTL. Sloane Street. 90 rooms.
Restaurants. Historical asroristlons with
Lily Langtry & Oscar Wilde. 01 335 714L !
HOTEL TWO. 2 craven Hill Gardens. Hyde
Park W— . B. & B. S3 JO. 01-723 7959.
Greece
ATHENS
m. GRAND E-KKETAGNE. .Leading hotel of
worldwide reputation. Alr-cond.. 450 TBS.
KING GEORGE HtL Most disting, hotel
of Athens. Cable: Gcklng Telex: 3U2&&
HOTEL ELBCTKA. Constitution Sq. The
gey *o Greek hospitality. Alr-cond.
HEBAZUON-CRETE
CRETA BEACH. Bungalows Hotel De Lira
comfort. Reasonable prices. RcAervs-
tlaas through Hotel Electro. Athens
COMMODORE, 200 rms .w. oath, alr-cond-^
Leue”n^SSS' 1 resL.barj»oliTurfcbth.TJl«SO C. Commodore
er,, PARK HOTEL. Deluxe^lr-coadHwim.-pooL
S5^So5I J £a*SS: ^rten. Rest.. Bar. Telex: 3M6. Rotary
X: 3584601 SXKA Hotel. 180 rms.. alr-cond.. pool. gar.
den. rest-.bar. TzJ159ft. Cable: Hlnahoiel.
ated on Alster G g ISBAEL j
etype: 02-12-387. ..
TEL AVIV
SHERATON -TKL AVIVuUl Rlr-concL3 Rest.
ttUng. All w ri. Bar. POOL For res., cable: Sheraco. For
ilmype: 0a23409 rog. any Sheraton in world. In London,
ivorite hotel of call: 01-837-98*713, in Paris call: 533-51-40.
MarimilianpL 5. ■ — - -
OMAJI7IC WAY rTALE ^^U^,
rllb bath. W.C BOMB
4067 - HOTEL EDEN. Deluxe, quiet central loc.
- overlooking part near shopping district.
, Bj-r-oonr, Res- HOSSLEH. HI Chest standard in the deluxe
Or paiSnaTaart class, pm tboose reswuraaL owa garage
VICTORIA. 1st cL next Via Veneto. but
SR TAUBER QUleL Boot card., alr-cond H. A Wlnh.
cL Fac. Tauber SAN BZ340
eda. well recom. ROYAL HOTEL A RESTAURANT. Garden.
salt water pool (heated in Spring i. or-
chestro. parting, tel. 843 2L telex 27511.
AIN VENICE
BACER GBGNWALD. deluxe on Or. Canal,
or. sc. Mark*A alr-cond. Terra ce-Reaiaor.
StrceL 90 rooms. —
isxodBtlous with la £Zr;£22BaRt KUWAIT
Ude. 01 235 7I4L
U Gardens. Hyde KUWAIT
L 01-723 7959. CTWAIT-SHEBATON. Delnxa. centr^ air-
c nrifi- . b mlim&niaa ^ hs&dQ. CXi Shera ion,
gSSSSaagr.VSE UBaaco sr.vg;y;~
MEXICO CITY
HOTEL CAMINO kBaL • Mexico's Finest.
70o Deluxe rooms: 10 Bara, Restaurants.
Nightclubs. 3 Swimming pools, Trunin.
Rea.: M. Escobedo 700. Mexico 5. D
Or Western International Hnt>t»
PORTOGAL cra^'^x£^
ALVOB (Algarve]
HOTEL ALVOB PRAIA. De Luxe, on the
beach, air con d„ grill bars, heated
POOL Cable SALVORHOTEL. Telex 1699P.
st-n view, resty boltu w at .-ski WINTER
from S4 pgle. 87 dble. SUMMER irom 85.
sgle. SS dble Res. Chic; ERANA -LISBON.
PRAIA DA ROCHA (Algarve)
HOTEL AliGABYB. luxe. Directly an share.
Swim. -poo I All balcony rooms lac. sea.
Swiss, management- cable. AlgarvoteL
CA5CAZS (sear Ltchaa)
CIDADELA. 1st cl. Pool Ref r. Gdn. Fr. swd
58. dwb 814. Cable: HOTELC1SADELA.
ESTORIL
ATTRAStAB. Ideal for winter. Faces Cases lx
Baj-.com f. rest., gdns. Pool. 85 sglc; 87 dble.
LISBON
TORS BOUSE. New lux. rcstd.. 47 R. Jane-
las Verdes Dble S10.break.all incL T. 888144.
FUNCHAL (Madeira)
RElD’s. Deluxe, tropic gardens, 3 pools tone
heated), sea bathing, wat.. ski, dancing
nightly, ten. Free gull. Cable: Raid&hoteC
SANTA ISABEL. Modem. All rms, w. bath.
Pul) board gii. Dble. 819. Bar-heaL-pooL
SAVOY. Luxurious, alr-cond. Steel, serv. 6s
cuh>. Gdns. 3 pools, skiing, term. mlnl-goU.
PORTO
GRANDE HOTEL DO PORTO. 1st el. Rest.
Bwh 8350. Dwb 56-75. Cable: GrandotcL
}..:u Switzerland ZJF. I
GRISOSS
ST. MORITZ (G .090 ft)
CRYSTAL. New First Class. Rest Bar.
Dancing. Sauna. Underwater massage.
LAKE GENEVA REGION
GENEVA
HOTEL CALIFORNIA. New. 1st cl. Central
loc. Garage. Tel: 31.5530. Telex: 23580.
HOTEL PHENTCIA. New. 1st close. Best.
Bar. Near Ltatioa. TeL: 44 01 &o
LAUSANNE
ALEXANDRA. lst-cL residence & siooovcr.
OartL P. renov/GT. 713436. T.: 223806.
SOUTHERN SWITZERLAND
BBI5SAGO (Magqlaro Lake)
Crash hotel au lac attraction o: the
Swiss BiTlera, pork, tennis, water stuag.
VALAIS
ZERMATT-MATTEHHOHH
Seil er’s M L CERVIN (deluxe), swhn.-pool 8s
MONTE BOSA illrsi cU .Open Deo. w Oct.
ZURICH REGION
ZURICH WALLISELLEH
BELAIR. 8 mlp. Airport 6s City. 1st -cl.
hoteL Restaurant troncats Bor Bowl-
ing. Juicy steaks BL-Ungnal staff
y uuosLAviA ty^^sns
OPATQA
AMBASSADOR^ Deluxe. alr-consL. Indoor-
outdoor sool Sea- view. T.7167) TX24134
ZAGREB
ESPLANADE INTERCONTINENTAL, de
luxe. Comerence- rooms. Restaurants. Ca-
sino. Nightclub. Snack-bar. Tx 21-S65
WHERE TO STAY
appears twice a week in the
To place an advertisement contact on* of the
advertising rwprasantaSvea listed fat the Classified
Suction of this paper, or Miss Fran^oise CLEMENT,
21 Baa de Berri. Paris-Ba. ToL: 225-2840.
ihTTTl
ing
— TWO — Stocks MS Sts. Net
High. low. D.V. tn s TQSt- First. High Low Lost. OVg*
— mo — Stocks wto "h. NW
HMbLow. Dtv. In s 100s. First. High L**r LW. Ch'oa
— mo — stocks nd «l Not
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* 3SM> AcmeAW 3b 79 45 45V, 45 45— %
IS? 95 1OT * 14 * i* + %
T5U 11% Ad MUR* M 29 12 12% « 12
tL. £2? £“7** M0 w 45 47,4 « *7ft+2ft
1040 Admiral 162 11% 12% 11% 11%+ %
m -lainflilrii
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KMT
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am 34% Alhertoc .28
n sis Aitansns J6
AJ'4 3ft Aetna LJf 1.40 395 <4 4440 4 3ft 4ft + %
19 jpgl* Co 8 12Vk 12% 12V» lah- %
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113% 1021* Aklr Rfl pfdJS 3 110% 113 110% 7« +4
18% 161* Air Red _20e 215 18 18% 17ft 18%+ %
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M% T6ft Ala Gas 1.10 16 17% 17% 17% 17»+ %
am 3ft Alhertoc .28 S3 37»» 40% 37ft 40%+3
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21% 24 AlcanAUl 1.20 183 26% 26% 26 26%+ %
2rn 18 AhsStand M 38 20% 201a 19% 20
25% 21% AJexndrs JBr 37 Hft ?4% ZJ'A 24ft +tft
13% 9% Alteg Cp 20a 195 10% 1DT« W% 1Qft+ %
49% 27ft Alleg 4pf cld 157 31 32ft 3t 311*+%
39% 3ft Alleg Lud 2.4Q 47 37% 3771* 36%37ft+ %
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39% 34% AlIUMnt .4Qb 22 3714 37% 37% 37%+ %
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51 20ft 20ft 20% 20ft+ 4b
301 68ft 72 Oft 71tt+3%
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1 41ft 41ft 41ft 4lft— ft
45 24% 25% 24ft 25ft+ la
46 59ft 62ft 59% 61VH-2
65 4 5ft AAlrFlltr JtO SOI 48ft 50ft afl’.i SB +184
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2305 5-32 5-16 5-32 ft+1-16
31% 21 4Am Airfin JM 504 25% 27ft 25% 26%+ 7*
15 13% Am Baker 17 13ft 14 13ft 14 + >4
36% 30 ABrands 2.10 182 32% 32ft 32ft 32ft+ ft
39ft 31ft AmBdcst 1.20 113 33ft 34ft 33ft 34 + %
45ft 38ft Am Can 2JQ 364 40 40ft 4o 40ft+ ft
26% 34ft A Can pf 1.75 26 25% 25ft 25% 25%=- ft
14ft 10ft Am Cam .60 48 13ft 14ft 13ft 13 ft
29ft 26ft A Chain 1 JO 13 27% 28ft 27% 28%+l
27 31 AmCredlt .90 31 25% 26% 25% 25%+ %
26 21ft ACrySug 1 JO 2 23ft 34 23ft 24 + ft
27ft 35ft Am Cyan 1.25 438 27% 28 27 27%+ ft
20% 19ft Am Distill 1 9 19ft 20% 19ft 1918- ft
31ft 34% ADIstTel -10a 91 29% 30ft 29% 29%+ ft
10% Bft Am Due (Vest 91 9ft 10% 9>-a 10 +1
T3ft 12 A Dual pfj4a 3 12% T7T» 12ft I27i+ %
31ft 37% AmElPw 1.64 873 30ft 31ft 30% 31%+lft
33 27ft Am Enka la 89 31% 31 ft 31% 31U+ %
21V* 11 Am Exp Ind 123 13ft W« !»■ 14ft+l%
66 60ft A Ex Ind pfA6 3480 61% 61V* 60% 60'*-2
24ft 18 AGnlns JO 112 20ft 20!t 20ft 20 Vt+ ft
36% 29 AGnln pfIJO 21 31ft 31ft 31ft 31%+ %
15ft 12ft Am Holst JO 114 15 15% IS 15ft+ ft
!
ivrKilr ‘1
36% 29 AGnln pflJO 21 314
15ft 12ft Am Holst JO 114 15
TVS 62 A Home 1JD 156 64
105% 92 A Home pf 2 2 95% 95% 95% 95%+Ift
47% 37% Am Hesp M 352 40 4Zft 39ft 4lft+l%
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21ft 17% AmMFdy .90 149 20% 21ft 20% 21ft+ ft
40 33ft AMeiCIX l.« 174 36% 37V* 36% 36ft— %
96V* 85% AM etc lx pf 4 3 90% 90ft 90% 90%-Ttt
10ft 8ft Am Motors 1080 10% 10ft 10% 10ft+ %
38ft 30ft lamNalGas 2 70 38 38ft 38 32%+ ft
14ft 10ft Am Pholo .12 166 10ft 10ft 10ft 10ft+ V*
99% 77% AResDv -06a 231 B3 88ft 83 86W+3V*
24% 19ft An teat 1 4 22 22% 22 22 + %
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NT
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29% 22ft ArmcoSt 1 JO 112 26ft 27 26% 24%+ %
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• •••••• # t *
• m MM Mt
17* 13ft Cobb KRft 1
32% 20ft CanracCp JO
28ft Qm Ed is t JO
68% 79 CBiEdb Pf 4
67ft 62% Con Ed* pf 5
63 57% ConE pfOJJS
4lft 37 ConFesd 1.13
7C6ft 95% COift* pH. SO
29% 24% CanFreight 1
10Ti 7ft Can Leasing
277* 23ft CanNatG 36
36% 31% COra Powr 2
65% 58V* CoaPw p*4L50
59% 36% CsnPw pf+16
13ft 10 ContttrL JO
74ft 63>* Ont Can 2J0
70 66 Cl Can pf4J5
12ft 10ft cent Cep J7«
•iP* 38 Cent CP 2
481* 42ft Ct Cp P IAS .53
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22ft 20% Centura J8a
27ft 22ft Cent Oil 1 JO
431* 34% Cnfrtai pT 2
28% 25 Com Stt 1
33ft 18 Cant T«l J2
123% 58 Central Data
59 55 CoDat pf4JQ
34ft 32 CttTWood 1J0
43% 35V* Cook Unit JO
33 27 Cocsnrln 1 JO
90 80 Coop but Bf AS
20% 18 Cooper TR 1
20% 18% CuopT fHJ 5
40 sift copetand lJ 9
79ft 69ft OWJRge JB>
18% 16ft CfepWfSfl TJO
33ft 28ft Corinth B J7a
261 06 CorGW 2J0a
29% 20 Coronetln 02
10ft 7ft Cow;« Com
24% 19ft cox seen JO
36ft 30% CPC Inn 1.70
39% 37 Crane lJOb
19 16 Credit*? Fin 1
16ft mcrampKn JO
19 14% 14% 14% 14>*+ %
13 22ft 23% 22% 23ft + ft
171 27% 27ft 27% Z7VS+ ft
6 85 85 85 85
23 64ft 65% 64% 65%+ ft
ZCQ 62% 621* 62V* 62V*
184 39ft 39ft 39ft 3M*+ ft
73 99 99 99 99 + %
97 28ft 291* 28ft 28K+ ft
42 8ft 9ft 8ft 914+ ft
18/ 267* 28 26?% 27H+t%
148 36 37 36 3Sft+ ft
*2M 63% 63% 63% 63%— ft
8180 56U 56ft 56ft 56ft+ ft
78 lift 17% lift llft+ ft
B9 77ft 77*9 77ft 72tt+n&
229 67 67 67 67
38 lift lift lift llft+ ft
106 41 C4 4% 4lfe+*i
16 47* 44ft 43 1 * 44V*+1
3 44ft 44% 441a 44%+ 1*
188 21% S 211* 21%+lft
449 * 241* 25ft 24% 2Sft+ ft
15 36 36% 35% 36%+ ft
5 25 25 25 25 — ft
252 2Zft 23ft 22% 23%+1
910 39 62 56% 56ft-»6
290 57ft 571* 57ft 571*-1
24 33ft 37ft 33ft 33ft
41 40 40% 39 397*- ft
14 30ft 30% 30% 30%+ %
1 84 84 84 84 +1%
6 18ft 18ft 11% IB '4 — ft
1 19ft 19ft 19ft 19ft- ft
6 35 3SV* 34ft 35%+ ft
115 74ft 75 73% 75 +1
to 17 !F4 17 ?7ft+ ft
34 29ft 30% 29ft 30 + ft
31 215 £25 215 734 +8
309 21V* 22 21 22 + V*
6 8% 81* B 8 —ft
*29 3P.a 21ft 20ft 91ft+ ft
213 33ft 3*ft 33ft 34ft+ ft
22 39>* 40 39*.* 40 + ft
35 ?Sft 20% 7<R4 20 +1
11 1514 16% 15ft 14%+lft
FiM - * 1 *? i ll> i
International Bonds Traded in Enrope
Dollar Bnnrlf
Aer Ung e— 81.. 91ft
Amax 6Vt-e2 841*
Am Brands HI 97%
Amoco 6tt43 88%
Armco U1 7V«J. 91%
AvmProd 6ft41.. 86%
BancoNaOb 71S-74 91%
Bayer Hi w/w.. 95
BEC 7-73. 95
Bemfht 8+». WVs
Borg War 8-79... 97
BrenAuto 6ft-77.. 92%
Cafcae Nat 4ft4S. 86%
Cetanes 6ft4Q.... 87%
ChevranO 6'V72- 96%
ChevranO A80.... 91ft
Chrysler Hi 87%
CorUOtl 740..... 92
Copra City 844.. 95'i
Copen Tel OH2. 841*
Cut>rH 7V*40... 92
Cyanamld SU40. 85
Denmarle 6ft42.. BJ%
El & Mos 63H2.. 84
Eur C&S 6%47... 87%
Ew invBk A’i-sa 90
ENI 6ft 48 Nov.. 6/
Eriks berg 6ft -82. B9
Ford HI 95*i
4 Seas w/w v*+4 781*
GenMIlls 740. ... 91
W. R. Grace 5ft -a0. >4%
Grangesb 6ft47.. 84
Honda 7V4-81 92U
Honayiretl 641... 85%
tcalandAlu 6ft43 85%
lnTlncFund 823 •
fnfUIil ft / W 6ft- 78 69
Kawasaki 7ft-73. 98
Leasco 7+4 92*4
Mexico 74J 85
Mitsubishi 7ft-73. 98
MoPil Int 745.... 83ft
Nabisco 6^*42... 9t
NacFin 71642... 84
N.BnmSW fift-79. 93%
N .Zealand 6ft-79. 96'*
Nippon El 71+-B1- 89ft
NipptmPet 71*-73. 97
Norsk Hyd 61*42. 87ft
Occ Mental 7%44. 87
Opplend 61+82... 84
.Osb) 68+77. 92%
{U»m 95ft
W4 PhlllnlF 6VM9... 911*
*5% Portugal 69*47.. 94
2].* Prod&G 6V*42.. 18
89V* OoebocHydra +7 97
92% Renaurt 6ft42... 85
87i? Rockw«i tfJk-n.. 96V*
« 5.F.E. 7-74. 94
96% Shell Inti 41*49.. 89%
97 S.PLC.F. 6V*4S. . . 85
971* Siemens SVr-79... W%
98 Somttomo 7ft-73. 98
94 Teledyne 7-7X... 9PA
•7»* Tefed 61+83 w/w. 82
gV* TransalpF 68443- 86%
?TV* Traraocean 844. 94ft
TJLW. 7V. -83.... 88%
88% ZapatawAv 6ft 40 80%
93
C oB T Brt fllh
93
86 Amoco 5V*44.... 81
SO Amro 5V*49 93
85 Apco 649 91
87 Alusulsse 4ft 47.. 90
92 AmCan 4ft 48.... 81
83% AmTobSU48... 91
90 Asahi 61l>4< 101
rn< Ashland 548 78
80 BurmaO 51448... 84
92 Chevron 54B 87
94 MhtS 48643. TOS KJ7
96ft Mitsui 6%43 125 128
921* Motorola 4V+83.. 84% 85%
95 MurphyO 549.... 70 72
69 Nabisco 5%-tt... 104 106
98 Owens III 5-77... 99% 101%
86 PanAm SV648... 70 72
97% PepsiCo 4%-91.... 110 112
95 PMlMor 4ft49... 93 94
90% Phil Lamp 4ft43 105 107
86% PlanRarch 61*44. 92% 94
96 R.CA. 548 85 87
90 Ravton 4*4-83 96 98
911* ReynMet 541.... 84 86
84 56arfe 4ft48 <5 87 :
88 Texaco 4%4S.... 75 77
9Sft TF 5+7 74 76
89% Tyro lot 581.... 51 53
82 Utah Int 5ft43... 130 132
WardPood 5ft48- 76 78
.. Warn Lam 4%4B. 110 112
Market Summary
March 35, XftTO
Blast Actives — New Sorts
98 Owens III 5-77... 99V
86 PanAm 5ft4a... 70
97% PepsiCo 4%-9l.... HO
95 PMlMcr 4ft-89... 93
Gt W Ftnan
Phlll P«t
Swingline
NatTaad
Am Tel Tel
GAC Corp
Int Miner
Telex corn
Gen Motor*
Occtden Pet
Palrch Cam
Am Atat*-s
Chrysler
Jim Waiter
Texaco
eat Chse Cfc*or
22L200 21% + %
21X400 241* + 8 t
17X600 33ft +3%
169,780 24% +1ft
14 JOT 53% + ft
140JO0 42ft + Is
136J00 13ft + ft
124 JO) 127ft +!ft
136J00 751* +2V*
176,400 23ft + %
litjoo n +s%
letfioo 70% + %
851* Chesebrsb 6ft44
85 Chrysler 4ft 48...
n 8taUng-DM Bonds
95 Ireland 741 89 91
93 NJteland 6ft42. 88% 90%
92 SIraKvIna 7>J43. 91% 93
83
93 Uttit of Account Bonds
102 %
80 CassaMaz 5%-7B. 84 86
86 Cayado 78640.... 95% 96%
89 Com Fed El 6%46 84 85
99% 101 IS ComFWEI 814-79.
87% Oeraiyfs 5%49.. 60
83 Equity Pd SU49. 85
SCO EastKodak 41*48 97
90% Firestone 548.... 90
99 Pont 543 85
93'4 Gen Elec 47A45.. 79
U Gen Foods 4ft4J 98'
69
71
Copen city 7%-8*
95
97
CUP 6ft-77
a
62
85
87
Eur C&S 5H-86-.
97
99
Manitoba 71+39.
90
85
92
87
NoraesK SVV43-.
Reoertres 676-68.
99 Hitachi 6Wi-84....
921*
9*
mi I4.E. 5+8
96
98
92 lAJL 6ft-89
100
102
85% J. Logan *ft-83..
84
16
99% WaffKWdo 5-69- .
77%
79%
971* Komatsu 6ft-6*..
101%
103
90ft Kubota 6%4X...
98%
100
95 Leasco 5-88
67
49
87ft Leases 549
60
42
88% LTV 5-BB
46
*8
85 War Midland Hi.
98%
100%
79 II Rjsd 6ft43 IS
98% 100% Sac®- 686-77.... 98
921* 94 Scotland 89*44... 94%
9* 98 Watrvry 78644.. 88
93% 94%
90 91
87% 88%
92 93
93% 94%
15 85
98 99
94% 95%
88 89
Bond trade — Index
(Basis Dec. 31. >966- J)>
Mad. Long Cftnr.
Yesterday. 96J5 89J1 1007
Chrysler 104^33 29 +184
Jim Waiter - ioqjos 30% +2%
Texaco 9X108 27ft + ft
volume, an stocks, 17jod,00o stores.
Volume, is stocks, 2.007.700 shares.
Batlo, Ifi stocks. 12 percent.
Average price, 15 stocks. $40.90.
New 1970 blgbs, 103; Iowa. 82.
issoes traded la: 1.627.
Advances, dacUnea, 300; *u- .
chaaged. IBS. 1
N.Y. stock index: 49.88 +1.03: Indus-
trials: 62.01 +1A6; transportation : 1
38.7® +0.'!7: Utility; 41U +0.89:
finance: 6SA5 +L45.
Most Actives — American
Reserve OG l4'J00 9ft + ft
Career Ac • 120 jeo 12% — ft
MUgo Elect 9+300 TBft +M6
syntax 77+00 34% +1%
Sav'mB Mch 57.100 45 +2%
Bmp F ini n 54 ,iC0 J7li +lft
Wabsh Mag 51+00 m* +Tft
Eco logic 5c5 51,108 20% +1U
Kinney pf C «,2M 9% + «
Sequoyah In 47JCQ 5 + %
Approx total stock sales SMO/sm
Stock sales year ago 5X51J9S
in. stark index:
High Low dose NafCM.
2X24 24 J9 24,99 +3?
Foreign Stock Indexes
Amsterdam. 131.1
Brussels 91.65
Frankfort .. 150.67
London 30.. 3903
London 500 150J4
llilaa 72.46
Paris - 99.8
Sydney 808.58
Tokyo (Hi _ 1 82.37
Tokyo (ot .. 3481.01 2
Zurich ...... 327J
(n) New. h») Old.
1978
Hlxh Lew
13L1 116.4
1 92.73 91.19
i 269.15 141.71
423.4 385.6
I 182.27 14847
t 72.67 69.34
107J 9X8
663.48 SMJ3
J85J9 173.43
2495.18 2283.68
855.0 8344
European Cold Markets
March 28. 1978
Open Close Chance
London — 3547 8847 +0.05
Zurich 3545 85J2 +0.97
Pails 1124 kilo;... 85.74 36.73 +0.M
UA dollars per ounce.
Bank Stocks
ELLIS AG ZUERICH
Weinplatz 6
Phone: 274147. — Telex; 63 641
BROKERS FOR:
Stocks - Eurobonds - EurodeposUa
1116%
For how long?
United States investment Pian Bonds
for US $500 or more give you a guar-
anteed, fixed return. Year after year.
So, our 24-year U.S.LP. Growth
Bond pays 11%% compounded an-
nually. For 24 years.
Which Is unlike some people. Who
promise you the moon. Take your
money. And then conveniently lower
theJr interest retest
U.S.l.P. takes money too seriously
to play games with ft. And taking care
of your money entails an even greater
responalb fifty than taking care of our
own.
Vou can invest in any freefy con-
vertible currency. Have full capital
protection. Guaranteed growth. Pay
no sales charges or U.S. taxes.
And nobody ha ever lost a penny
with U.s. UP.
Just elide your choice below and
mail
□ tnPFmpcdn
□ fbucM KsaaMtw
BM.
Asfcad
»rus.
BLL
Bank of Am. XP. ...
62
62%
69%
Fiduciary Tr.
■78
84
78
First Nat. Boston
71%
73%
7D
OJ. Trust Co. ^
64
65
64
High Low CM Notch*.
2X24 24-59 24,99 +3?
Dow Jones Averages
Open High Low Oom ‘ Not
30 Ind 778.45 80346 775J7 790.13+1647
20 Tm 17146 17X11 T70J9 173 J4 + 343
15 Utl 11X15 119M 11X57 11X16 + 2*7
65 Slk 25949 267.02 25844 363J2 + X&J
Standard £ Poor’s
High low cion ttx-
ra IntUXfrtAh 99J5 9X43 9842 +143 1
25 Railroads 3X04 3549 3748 + .(
55 Utilities 6BA 8 5840 5936 +J-5J
500 Stocks 9147 8X11 89.77 +1.79
Odd-Lot Trading in N.Y.
Shares
Bey MT '■Short
March 24 286JE8 338,442 5,455
March 33 ...... 235.461 342.115 7.968
March M .... .482411 *27.790 MB
Maith 19 285454 885^0 X«0.
March 18 818,044 -840,777 -6,030
■ There totals are Included la the
sales figures.
CAPITAL GROWTH:
8tf%fbr2jK.
mfoMyrs.
9%for6yrs.
9%%for8yrs.
WforlOyrs.
mfor!2yrs.
mforl4yrs.
10%%fbrl6yrs.
10%%forl8yrs.
lOWufor 20 yrs.
11% for 22 yrs.
11*5% for 24 yrs.
Capital Italia ba
CariMco K.V. "S- Guns
Cariblce/warraiu B
Cleveland Otfsoore JPuad-.w
ComPUma La raiment* Fd
Con vara Pd Int: A ds B 6h.
Conrersuila Baud Fd. N.V.
Crosby Fund B . A
d. a c
Uelca [nrestmexrt Fond _
Delia Mnltt/and
Dreyfus Intdrcont. In.*. Fd.
Dreytus OUshore Trast.„
she bl — .
ebeo H ^
Ebor QianaM Capital Tr.
Ebo,- Trust Chan Island
EJX1 F BA
Enropa-Valor — ■ , -
Bnrunwn .....
Executive Fund Canada ™
Executive Growth Fund-.
FjXLT HV t
FD dr 6 International Fend
MgpSSSI®."
Piducem
Financd Onion
Pine Art Fund. Znc.
fli«t / nnKt •
FIRST ENVESTOR3:
— American Trust .....
— Inz-lWn.jbPttr Ht
First Liberty Fund Ltd. ..
Pint National City Fund
First Security Capital Fund
Fl emi ng Fund e.A
Firmin g Japan p«ind
nachncr Becker Bbrueh.,.
Pond* Ocitra
VbnMrr
Forest Growth Food BA
Forest Income Fund a*
Mutual funds or Am Ltd.
Neckermann-Pano
Neuwirth mfl Fond..-.. —
Haawirth Zavcsunent Fd.
N-A4LF .... .
Nippon Fund
Nippon Dynamics PpacL-
Nonhska Fuad niwrmi
N.Y OUshora fund N.V.
Nor Amor In* Fund ~
Nor Arner, Bank Fund _
Olympic capital Fond «
FaeUu Beatoara Food
PAM AMKR MUTUAL PD6:
— Pan Amer Growth Po
-«■ Fan Antf r 7n Fd
— Pan Amor. Bpedel Fd
_ — Beal Estate Eomiiw
Performance Group Fuad
pSMSI-
Ke«v estate rand ol Am
Renta Puna .. -
Roosevelt Find
SAFE GROUP:
— Bare Fond
— Sale Trust Fond
— Global Fond
— Cosmopolitan Fuad _.
Becrmty Growth Puna -
Selective Am Realiy Fd.
a eipct ive Capital Puna ..
SKPBO
Shamrock Pond .. .
Share Realty Fund. N.V. „
Shareholders BxcaliLur —
8JXC FUNDS:
— Boston int Seoumiea ■
. — Chase Selection Fuad
— Crossbow Fund .. .._
— - Infl Technology Fd,
— Invest Selection Fd
Sagelux Capital Fund .....
B African lad Food ...
stanhope Trans&t Fund..
Staadard&Foor Int Fuad
SAP Dollar Fund
S A P Monitor Co Ltd.
«4 « P eBer.mg Fimo .,
Sues Amer. Bisk oapIutL..
SAM
SX44-
81443
11049
SIM
*10.00
*1841
S10J0
LJJJ97
19.12
Bah.».e339
812.61
834049
£4.63
£4.47
£5.31
* 21.00
fhoi&ja
81.069.33
U.S. Investment Services
Baumackeistrasse 42, Depl 15 T 6
8050 Zurich, Switzerland.
Enclosed Is my check made payable
to United States Investment Plan for
(US $500 or more) worth
of growth bonds circled above.
Country-
U. S. Investment Services
(Nassau, Bahamas)
• IMI tM • •••• • • *M
AttUtorirod Unease* 6 1 XHtmnic Systems Cor*
Formula Halve non Puna ..
Fortune rand 8414
Frontier Growth FPnd .. 87.8*
PrnnH ev Tnia . M_22
FUND OF AUSTRALIA GROUP:
— Food at Australia ... 85*4
— road or Australia _ £8.7.1
— Seal, State Fond „ Adb,85,83
Fund of the Seven 8eaA_ *1040
Oola^i Vumt ... *7,13
tSAMCO FUNDS:
— Ubip. Beal Estate ... 8741
— Graaeo Iberia Ftas.fl9.fl:
— usmaiia rBO-ao) .._ 45.00
Growth Equity F>inp Cau.SE. 60
tJoardiaaOrowthFdJat'L- *5.00
Sambro Overseas Pond _ 8945
Eauscmaad Hoidiaa* N.V. . 89.T77
Eedged In testers limited 312.984
KXOTBobBt — — *36.14
ICOFtJND — 81043
KT FUNDS:
— TU* DO Oar Fund _ IlLtl
— Reaistoek 11X07
— Fund of New Tort „ *2241
„rr Fund or NaHona 8848
DMA lav Portfolio,. (U4
IK GR OW Po nd *31.07
LOB FUNDS:
— Focdiialla r - 81242
— Fuad of FnPOjl 822.16
— TOP Sterling £L19J
— I1T 38,20
— Investor? Foods - S 4X21. 88
— IOS Growth Pnnd.. M . 111,18
— IOS ReRDJ Fuse 3846
— TOS Venture - Can 3X06
— ion Vrarnr* «Tum.~ 88J3
— AuatreliaB FOP Aus4U.I2
I.U R 8 . . 89.01
Integrated Growth FuflA.... 3*43
to Serf Lx 110X47
Swirevaior New Series U . M 8^.34348
Target QUahore . 18 /VI
The Commodity Fund 8746
The Natreu Pond U4. 89.78
The US Puna N.V. tX41
24/M
28 /Id
8141
8JF.S445
B.FJTJW
8J.1B5J0
SJ. 108,80
81242
822.16
BL19J
38,20
SJU1.H
Ul.l«
SS4&
CaasxW
88 ja
Aaa4U,<2
89.01
3*43
110X47
Transpao ric P an a ^
Tyndall Bermuda Fund #
Tyndall Inter Fund
TTndall Ovnreeai> Fuad hi
n-ntfandj
UNION BANK 8WTTSS:
— Amea. U4 sh„ Bid
— Ehrlt. Bn Sh. „ BSd
— Ftaiea, Swiss ab Bid
— GkStovan Bid
— GtoMnvan ■ Bid 84-42.00
— Paclflc-ln vest. ... Bid 8^40X00
— Batii 8 AJ eh BiQ SJ*.20l.0S
_ — 8&na. gw a er Bid ajp.uxoo
OBJ GKUUP.
— itouea jnno funo 6UI
— Un Income & Qr Fa 81X00
— tel Venture Puaa .. *747
— Sura-Am. Brel Bit Fd . SIOjOO
— Fuad of Nations *10.00
naifl Lipn Flan.. *1.00
£J3 inconte Fmpenbs »».»
UB Lwd Food . . *543
g-B .trail lQf«t Ftmd . *11.72
Dhlreml Bk Stock Fund .81648
Vteun FUM 8A, 81042
Waahingion Anodater 1 16L70
Western America Gz Fd. . 810.00
Wests A uu >alla Umar Po S3 341
Western Growth mad .... *7.62
Western Hedgr Fd CT A. ’ S3.9&5
World Equity Growth Fd 87B9J»
World ln*ur Stack P“ ad 814.31
World Reel Bst stock Fa. *1441
Worldwide SecartOm - . til .19
Worldwide- Boetlai 3X245
Zodiac P"*»d .. *8.73
IF.— Mpn trafles 1 .' "L-F.—Lu
1 V*j. Highs and Lows
NEW HIGHS-. 103
Active Uf C
Air Prod
Air Redueta
Allied Sire
Am cyan
Am HoM
Am Motors
Am NetGas
Am Stand
Am Tel Tel
AtICtyE) 4pf
Aveo Corp
BankTr nY
Bddc Km
Bend Pin
Burl Ind .
Cobof drp
Cater Tree
Con UlPSv
Cent La El
Charter NY
Chare Manh
Chi Pneu T
ClT Flnand
Clew Eleclll
Com! Sotv .
Coml Sol pf
Cor NatGas
Consum pw
Crane Co
CradHft Fbi
Dot Steal
Drttlll Sea®
duPfrt <L50uf
Elpare NG
AExpInd p|
APL Cp pfC
.Atlas Cham
Barber on
Beal Foods
Beckman
Blue Soil
Can Sou Ry
Care ji
C het Cp v*
Cont Data
Far Wntf n
FN Pw
Fla Paw Lf
Ford Mat
Faxboro
Gerd Derw
Gan Cable
Gen Fd*
Gen Motors
GMet 3JSpf
GToiFh pf
Gulf S Ul
Kama Mno
Hat Curt A
Heller tnr
Housfcm LP
(deal Basic
III Power
Ing Rand
Ing Rand pt
Int Nickel
Intorpace
jimw i.m pf
Johns Manv
Kab Cam©
Kan Gas El
Kraflco Cp
Kroger Co
Leeds North
UbrtyLn pf
Lone S Can
Lone S Gas
LonelLl Bfl
MacAnd For
Ms reraont
NEW LOWS-33
Dentsoly Int II
Ennis BusF 6
Fed Pm pf *
Food- Fair. <
Hall Print f
Hallihurt F
Havtt Ah ■ f
Masco Corp
Masonite
Maytag
Medusa PC
Metromed'
MM So Utft
Mo PorCam
Nevada Pw
NYSta EG
Nor III Gas
Nor Ind PS
NoNG XBOpt
Nortai Co
Nort Sim pf
Okla GE
Ofcla N Gas
Oils Efev
Over Trans
Pa CO pf
Pub S« EL
Rex ChalnB
ScuddDVt pf
So Jar Gas
Sou Cal Ed
SwCrsst
sunon pf
SwlnflUne
r«x um
UGI Corp
umt um -
War Swarev
Wastg El
Westvuco pf
Martin M
Mmra Mdch
Murphy GC
CtoeWc* Mtp
Pftt Ft W pf
PPG led
Rhdana Fds
Hlttoo fatal -Rucker Co
Jergen And Triangl Ind
Leasewy-Tr Unlicvr Ltd
Lodiow Cp Woods Corp
Greece Tunis Down
British Reactor Deal
ATHENS. March 25 fBeuten).—
Britain has lost the chance at a
$73 million deal in which Greece
was to buy Its first nCdear reactor
from the British Atomic Energy
Authority, . the British Jimhensy
here ccmfirmed today.
Negotiations for the reactor be-
tween the authority and the state-
controlled : Public Power Corp..
Greece's electricity company, have
been discontinued.
M. KMeyerson
& Co., Inc.
Maintaining net markets la
700 U. X Owr-Tbe-CwBter Securities
For Batiks and Institutiore
via
oar direct Dnreus Wire to
. Bank Vriemson £ Cx, X X, Turicfe
- All doIhrorlBs In U.X funds
fhraush your New York Correspondent.
IS Exchange Mate, Jersey City, Hew Jersey 07302
Brokers ami Dealers in
Qnr-The&Hiinar SeutrtUes.
fit lerencer FVst Jersey Hjtkww Bank.
Jersey CHy, ft* Jwsey
NOW OVER
000,000
IN ASSETS
AND ■STILL. GROWING
1969 Net Asset Value
Climbs 17.45%
on Annualized basis
Despite Recent Market Trends.
1 Initial
I Net Asset
• No hnanfeouv
shnreholdar
I Immediate
I ♦ CAPITAL
MUM RISK
A 04. oriontad fund rendu*
basks atf real rettte.- .
PftmAlrlMl
I P.O.Box 432/ _
I T«L2‘7S76
I .i.— -,. Plaaiarere
i ( haw raviawod Um
■ 9nts
+ — otter price: %~ju fAi.
INTERNATIONAL
BUSINESS:
Srtirane
FINANCE
Published with The New York Times and The Washington Post
* tT
PARIS, THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1970
Pag© 9
Britain Gives Go-Ahead
Xo Textile Merger Plan
m-
*. ,*• jjOffDCN, March 25 (NYTL
££ qjB British government gay* the
; £ cro-abead today to an ambitious
by Imperial Chemical in-
lid., the chemicals and
-niffistto fibers g i ant , to acquire
mo JMjcr textile concerns and
mer ge tftpm into * new company.
TOtt JCI {dan is to bid lor the
o-jaj stock outstanding of Viyella
-ZgBttitmal LfctL, mamrfacforers
w jtfrte and polyester-cotton
f dries is wen aa Its well known
- — blending cotton and
*• * ..
j^e-s
?•&
By John M. Lee
terials to finished product. This
contrasts with companies Him r»u
Pont, which have stuck to the
fibers and left the finishing to its
customers.
However, the forward integration
of British fibers products has al-
ready drawn criticism from the
Mon san t o Interests of the United
jd would. also start discussions
rib Carrington «fc Dewhurat about
m t *rmg of a merger with that
oQBjpeoyi which la engaged in
veovtoK. knitting and. of
gprtbeUc fibers and other fabrics
Would Bedsee Holdings
jbt companies would then be
m 0gg d into a business with com-
& used worldwldB an n ual sales of
■; ; ® & »3j3 million. ICT had volunteered
V-; l-rednce its total beddings in the
> - '/> yg# company to less than 50 per-
" * V cBjfc of tha- shares and to run It
■■"’i-'f'fe oioloileskodentsitlt;.
r >«'' li-it xbt government, after studying
£ the matter far three months, ac-
■. i. n lx? ^pted the general toms of the
'“??** ,« pga. But tt imposed the conditions
- ” v2 *»■ tot id should reduce its equity to
; 7 f T5 'h«i a nr urfmiim of 35 percent, provide
■ u independent chairman and only
- u t/' me director and foreswear any at-
7'; **£.. tanpt to influence the new com-
’ panics have big fibers plants in
materials.
At the time, the government
sak that the s tandstill on further
im mogers between larger companies
in the textile industry,- announced
in Joba 1989; would be continued
with only slight modifications.
- r-i
r-
. : * ; a l-
Courtanlds Frozen
Tbt announcements apparently
[ frpf« the position of acqulsltlon-
minded Courtanlds Ltd., Britain’s
'• I jugest textiles mid fibers company
— ' — * ftprf fang a rival to ICE in. the fibers
T business. .
lore* ft preliminary aoundlngson a pool-
, jng of Courtaulds’s and ICG’s syn-
:i lu arlofl thetlc fibers business, along with
. that Of same other companies, in a
tt - s&tfanal fibers corpontion have
"-■tolled to produce any viable pro*
..'~ i!: pBsals.-
-- The ICI plan represents an eff-
‘ fort to create another integrated
■ -group, like Courtaulda, that spans
the textiles business from rawjna-
States and the Enkakm interests
of the Netherlands. Both com-
panies have big fiber plants in
Britain.
Sir Peter Allen, TCI chairman
said tonight that the gov ernm ent’s
conditions were acceptable. He
said one way to get his company’s
equity in the textile concern down
to 85 percent would be by other
mergers and acquisitions.
Ford Plans Visit
To Soviet Union
DETROIT, March 25 (Reu-
ters). — Ford Motor Co. chair-
man. Henry Ford 2d plans- to
go to Moscow April 12 at the
Invitation of the Russians, who
proposed a -series of discus-
sions," a Ford spokesman said
today. -
.The invitation was from the
Soviet Ministry of Science and
Technology. The Ford spokes-
man said it may mum there
is some Interest in extending
to the Soviet Union the trade
fees that same Ford compa-
nies in Europe now have with
Hasten European countries.
The Spokesman indicated
that Ford might be interested
In selling cars to the Russians,
but not in setting up a fac-
tory there.
Change in Price Policy
IBM to ‘Unbundle’ in Europe
PARTS, 25, — TntnmaHnn B 1
Business Machines, which last Jane
announced plans to “unbundle" its
pricing in the United States, said
today It was extending that policy
to Its 15 West European companies
as wen as Australia, New Zealand
and South Africa. But the step
will be taken gradually overseas.
Until now, overseas customers
have paid a single rental hr pur-
chase price for a computer and its
related sendees. However, five anti-
trust suite in the United States,
including one by the Justice De-
partment, complaining that the
company’s policy of quoting a
single price for hardware, software
and related support tended to- In-
hibit competition, prompted IBM
to break Its pricing Into separate
components.
These are for computer hardware
(the actual machinery) and main-
tenance, system engineering sup-
port, data processing education of
customer personnel, and software,
the coded Instructions needed to
operate the mp/attn**
IBM said today that the new
pricing would apply to all “newly
announced IBM systems’* and “will
be effective with regard to all
systems and products commencing
JUly 1, 1592.
“Because of government regula-
tions and procurement practices in
many countries in Western Europe,
the IBM companies within the Eu-
ropean business community have
concluded that curr e nt systems
s’ 1 "lid continue to be marketed
in' generally the same manner as
they have In the past,” the com-
pany said in explaining the two-
year delay.
Finland Decides
Wo’ on Nordek
LONDON. March 25 OTTO.—
Scandinavian diplomats were can-
fused. today by Roland’s surprise
announcement that it would not,
after all, sign the Nordek treaty far
extended economic Integration and
a c ustoms iminn am«mg the Scan-
dinavian countries.
After months of wavering and
contradictory statements, Finland
had indicated to Sweden, Denmark
and Norway that it would sign, and
probably ratify, the treaty, provid-
ed it could withdraw if any mem-
ber decided to join the European
Economic Community.
Then late yesterday. Mauno Koi-
visto, premier of the caretaker
coalition government following last
week's parliamentary elections, an-
nounced the negative decision.
Diplomats how suggested' that
Finland had been unnerved by the
quickened activity concerning pos-
sible enlargement of the EEC.
[»
EFT A Prepares Its Own Demise
By Clyde H. Farnsworth
*- ifeSgl
. . .
G ENEVA (NYT).— An institution of nine
countries, with a staff of fewer than 100
persons including charwomen and chauffeurs.
Is preparing' for Its own demise during the
expected remolding of Europe in the 1070s.
The European Free Trade Association, in the
words of Its secretary general. Sir John Coul-
sod, 'has done what it set out to do— It has
clearly worked.”
Should Britain Join th e Eu ropean Economic
Community, he observed, EFTA will become the
first international organization to fade away
dace the League of Nations.
Hr. Coulson, a former British diplomat, pre-
dicted in an Interview that the Europe of the
USDs will be a two-tier gro uping of EEC
'era and others, mainly the EFTA neutrals,
special free trade links with the com-
Creation of ’Outer Seven*
Created in 1960 as a defensive move by Euro-
an countries outride the Common Market—
» “outer seven,” as they were then known—
sfehliahed an industrial free trade area that
u brought them, solid economic advantages.
It was devised by the Bri tish Foreign Office
« a temporary expedient until the advent of
vkler economic unity in Europe. That moment
buy be approaching with the likelihood of
Brithh-EEC negotiations later this year.
Serious negotiations are not foreseen until after
.Britain's next general elections, which must be
. wlW by the spring of 1971.
Tvo other EFTA countries— Denmark and
Norway— have applied for membership along
Will jh fcrin A fourth applicant, Ireland, has
- dME-tagfe ties with Britain, but Is not In
Efua,
The remaining EFTA countries, comprising
a bloc of 100 minion people, ar- Sweden,
Switzerland, Austria, Portugal and the most
recent member, Finland is an associate
member.
. ds the biggest •wytinn in the group, Britain
fe the commercial heart of EFTA and, as Mr.
Gouhoo said, the organization cannot exist
Wthout it.
But EFTA will not be dissolved until It is
absolutely certain that Britain is in the Com-
mon Afartefc. The British then want a year’s
standstill on integrating commercial p olicie s
with the EEC during which the other EFTA
countries would negotiate their own arrange-
ments with the enlar ged community.
At this time EFTA would serve merely as a
consultative body. The hope of its me mb er
countries is to maintain tariff-free trade with
each other even after they have negotiated
special ties with the EEC.
With the French veto of British membership
lifted only after President Georges Pompidou
repla ced Gen. Charles de Gaulle last year,
EFTA's life has been far longer than any of
its founders had anticipated, its achievements
also have been far greater than expected.
Stimulating Trade
Trade among EFTA countries has increased
more than 2 1/2 times since i960. Trade
among the Scandinavian countries has more
than tripled and helped to stimulate moves
toward, a Nordek union.
The experience of both organizations show s
the benefits of trade liberalization. The EFTA
countries eliminated all tariff barriers in indus-
trial products in trade with each other. But
the EEC has gone much further, establishing a
customs uni on in which there is not only
internal free trade but a common external tariff,
framing a common agricultural policy and
deep ening economic cooperation with , the hope
of eventually creating a political union.
Since they are geographically dispersed, the
EFTA countries have made no efforts to
establish a common agricultural policy. Trade
concessions in farm products are limited to
those achieved in bilateral negot iation s. It
was the agricultural limitations of BETA that
prompted Denmark, a major farm producer,
to apply for membership In the EEC.
Tw liberalizing Industrial trade, the nine
countries bo EFTA have also made significant
progress in reducing: some non-tariff barriers
that impede the free flow of goods. They
ended discriminatory tax policies that favored
Iprmi manufacturers and ala'’ abolished quota
restraints an industrial imports.
fetish Output Grew
2 Percent Last Year
toKDON, March 25 (Special).—
ljn[& * Q k gross domestic product
I J2 “bout 2 percent at constant
f Jart y eu . f the Central Stafcls-
Office said today.
.* 1S60 total adjusted for sea-
y* X* 1 I *ctar6 l was put at 38,596 bll-
.•* pounds ($92.63 billion).
• Brlt feb growth rate com-
. 4 g percent for the six
'' .uZ?? 8 tbe European common
b a whole.
’•-Jri» 0rtB 01 BOod& and services
• r«e over 8 percent during the year
!»■- prices, while consumer
“•wKbtare rose less than 0.5 per-
-o
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Biggest Rise in Europe
U.S. Affiliates Abroad Plan
20% Spending Boost in 1970
By Jan Nugent Pearce
WASHINGTON, March 25 (WF).
— Overseas affiliates of US. com-
panies plan to boost their plant
and equipment spending a whop-
ping 20 percent tn 1970 to $12.7
billion, the Commerce Department
reported yesterday.
The biggest increase would come
In Western Europe, where the UB.
government’s program to curb
capital outflows In order to assist
the precarious Ujs. balance of pay-
ments is most stringent.
Unless those curbs over foreign
investment abroad are loosened, a
major part of the projected ex-
pansion. must be financed in
Europe’s already-strained capital
markets.
lofting Curbs
Commerce Secretary Maurice H.
Stans said recently there was no
likelihood of easing the curbs "be-
fore sometime late this year.'
Even then, it could only happen
after the balance of payments
showed substantial Improvement,
he said.
UjS. affiliates in Canada also
plan a vigorous expansion in their
capital spending this year, fore-
casting a 26 percent gain to $2L9
bflUon. This fallows a 1969
Increase of 10 percent, according to
Commerce Department data.
Last year, overseas subsidiaries of
UJS. companies boosted their plant
and equipment spending a total of
12 percent, well below this year’s
20 percent forecast.
Capital Source
If the estimates are fulfilled, it
could heighten tensions between
the European Economic Communi-
ty and the United States. During
recent trade talks here, Common
Market officials • complained that
UJS. companies are sopping up an
the available European capital
Last year, UJS. branches in Com-
mon Market countries increased
outlays 16 percent, For 2970 they
project a 37 percent rise— the
largest for any major area — which
would bring outlays to $2£ billion.
The Commerce Department com-
mented: “If credit conditions are
very, tight and the [control] pro-
gram remains unchanged, actual
plant and equipment expenditures
in 1970 could well be lower than
now projected.”
The department emphasized the
large boost of $1.5 billion, forecast
for manufacturing activities, to
total $6Jl billion, contrasted with
much smaller expenditures in pre-
ceding years.
The machinery industry led the
manufacturing group last year with
a 27 percent growth, and will hold
that position In 1970 with a pro-
jected 40 percent increase.
This machinery expansion large-
ly reflects the Introduction of more
advanced computers and related
equipment into Western Europe,
the department explained.
UJ3. officials speculated that
many UB. firms, discouraged by
trade barriers erected around the
Common Market, are now Choosing
to manufacture their products on
the spot.
British Group
Has Net Gain
LONDON, March 25 (TJPI).—
Guest, Keen and Netfiefolds Ltd.
(GENj, Britain'S largest engineer-
ing group and biggest steel user,
today reported jumps In profit and
turnover for 1969.
GEN said Its turnover rose some
$1872 million to nearly $123 bil-
lion in the year ended. January.
The British-based companies in
the group accounted for about $864
million of turnover while GEN’S
overseas companies contributed
$3672 million.
At $4352 million, net profit was
$4B TnJTIinn higher tViari in the
previous year.
Kloecbner-'Werke
DUISBURG, West Germany.
March 25 (Reuters; Kloeckner-
Werke AG, the iron, steel and coal
concern, said today group net prof-
it soared 90 percent In fiscal 1969
on a 7.6 percent sales gain.
Profits for the year ended Sep fc.
30 jumped to 69.4 mtinfcm marks
($182)6 million at post-revaluation
rates of exchange) from the year-
before's S6.4 mflUim marks as sales
rose to 1.83 billion marks ($498£
million) from L7 billion marks.
Kloeckner said estimated profits
of 13.5 wfflion marks ($3.7 million),
reflecting the disposal of mining
Rate Cut Sets N. Y. Prices Soaring
stocks and investment-grade issues.
interests, were not included in the
net, but rather transferred to a
special reserve fund. These inter-
ests were transferred to Ruhrkuhle
AG on Jan. 1, 1969.
Store Chains
Show Profit
Drop in U.S.
NYSE to Bolster
Emergency Fund
NEW YORK, March 25 (Reu-
ters).— The New York Stock Ex-
change announced today plans to
make a loan of up to $30 million
available to its $25 million special
trust fund, pending further studies
of how much the fund will need in
the future.
Robert W. Haack, NYSE presi-
dent, said a staff study, started
last fall and recently completed,
recommended that the exchange
Increase the size of the fund, used
to help in the liquidation of mem-
ber brokerage houses. It acts as
a form of Insurance for investors.
As a result, a special committee
has been appointed to determine
the appropriate size of the fund
and ways to enlarge it
In the Interim, the excha n ge
intends to make the $30 million
available if necessary from its
general funds subject to board and
member approval
Earlier this week, John L. Loeb,
m B ringing - partner of Loeb, Rhoades
<fc Co„ made public his call for an
increase in the fund to $100 mil-
lion.
NEW YORK. March 35 fNYT).
— R. H. Macy & Co. had its first
quarterly earnings decline in
seven years in the three months
ended Jan. 31, which Included the
normally heavy Christinas busi-
ness.
Macy had sales of $290.26 mil-
lion in the 13 weeks ended Jan. 31,
up 4.6 percent from the $277.47
million volume in the preceding
year's period. Earnings were $1222
million or $1226 a share, down
from $1X25 million, or $L3l a
share a year earlier.
Far the 26 weeks, Macy*s sales
rose 5.4 percent to a record $514.17
million from $487-34 million.
Earnings were $17.67 million, or
$1.82 a share, compared with 517.63
million, or $1.87 a share, on fewer
Shares in the preceding year’s
period.
For the 52 weeks, Macy’s sales
rose 7J percent to a record $904.81
mini on from $844X6 million. Earn-
ings rose to $34.41 million, or $3.48
a share, from $2X74 million, or
$2X7 a share.
Dayton-Hndson
Daytan-Hudson, formerly Dayton
Carp-, which operates department,
discount and specialty stores and
owns and operates shopping cen-
ters. had a net Income of $23.67
million in the fiscal year ended
Jan. 31, or $1.49 a share. This was
down from the $24Jj6 million, or
$1.54 a share, earned in the pre-
ceding fiscal year, restated to in-
clude results of J. L. Hudson Co_
acquired last June. Revenues rose
to $888,375 million from $811.89 mil-
lion.
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The proven investment vehicle
to participate In the profit* of the most
promising investment area of the 70s.
Situation of the Portfolio at 3L 12. 60
$UB 20.081.451 (76,2 V.) In Japan
Sus 6.314.605 (20,1 V.) In Australia
PERFORMANCE RECORD: * 67,7%
In one year (Net asset value)
1.10.1868: gus 23,06 .
31.12.1968: 23,11 0,2%
27. 6.1969: $U9 29,03 + 25,8*/«
5.1.1970: $ub 38,74 + 67,9 */•
■The prices are dally quoted In thte
newspaper.
For any Information end subscriptions
aoply to the Trustee snd Transfer Agent:
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P.O. Box 377 — Telex 303 Uon-Tel 472031
Except tor United States residents.
By Vartanig G. Vartan
NEW YORK, March 2b (NTT).
—Wall Street’s elusive dream— a
cut in the prime rate by a major
bank— finally came tru. today and
stock prices responded dramat-
ically with their biggest advance In
nearly two years.
finally, after months of despair,
frustration and a woeful market,
the nation’s investors and the
financial community had something
to cheer about. “This could be the
start of a real spring rally whoo-
ped one broker. Took outside-
even the sun is shining.”
The Dow Jones Industrial aver-
age soared 1637 to close at 790.13
as volume on the New York Stock
Exchange virtually doubled.
This was the best gain in the
Dow indicator since its upsurge of
18.61 points on April 8, 1968, a
period when stocks were rallying
in response to Lyndon B. Johnson’S
move as President to de-escalate
the war In Vietnam.
Volume Climbs
Turnover today boomed to 17.5
million shares, the heaviest trad-
ing since the final session of 1969.
It compared with yesterday's 8.84
milDion shares and with only 733
million shares on Monday, when
the postal strike slowed volume to
its slowest pace of this year.
A few minutes before noon, Irving
Trust, the seventh largest bank in
New York City, switched the hopes
of 26 wtuiion stockholders from the
debit to the credit column with
its cut in the prime lending rate.
T-k rif 1 . 5 cocks ana lnvestnm
Dow skyrockets, joined m the rally.
_ T , In a rare performance, every
Volume Climbs 0x151 of ^ 15 raost actlve
T Uiumc L1UUJJ8 and every one of the 30 Dow in-
dustrials finished with gains.
Among the 103 new 1970 highs
American Brands
In § 200 Million
Bid for Swingline
NEW YORK. March 25
(Reuters).— American Brands
Inc. said today it plans a $200
million offer to shareholders
of Swingline Inc. to pur-
chase all of Swingline's
outstanding common at $35 a
share.
The announcement said
Swingline president Jack Iin-
sky and treasurer Belle Linsky
have agreed to tender their IS
percent of the firm’s Shares.
The offer is contingent on
80 percent of Swingline's out-
standing shares being tender-
ed. although American Brands
reserves the right to accept
fewer shares.
At 12:30 pjxu when the market
was responding to this news with
mavimiim enthusiasm, the Dow ran
ahead by 23.30 points. It hod been
9.50 points higher at 11:30 a.m.
Some Profit Taking
During the afternoon, when sev-
eral other major banks followed the
lead of Irving Trust, prices were
reduced from their best levels by
profit-taking. Late today, it ap-
peared likely that a split prime
rate— with some money-center
banks retaining their basic charge
at 8A percent-might prevail for
an indefinite period.
Blue chips and glamours, build-
ing materials and savings-and-
loans. motors and drugs — all these
groups swept along In the forefront
of the electric advance, oils and
chemicals, along with depressed
were such blue-chip stalwarts as
American Telephone, up 7/8 to
53 3 8. and General Motors, up
2 1 8 to 75 1-8. By contrast, only
33 issues posted new yearly lows.
Ford, gaining 3 ’4 to 47 1 8 and
also registering a new high, and
Chrysler, up l 3 4 to 29, rounded
out a brisk showing by the “Big
Three” automakers. Auto issues
were strong prior to the prime-rate
cut, on the rationale that the in-
dustry has passed the low point
In new-car sales.
Charter New York, the bank
bolding company that owns Irving
Trust, fittingly rose to a new high
for the year, up 2 7 8 to 49.
Groat Western Financial, up
7. 8 to 21 7/8, was the most active
stock.
Prime Rate Cut Is Initiated
By Irving Trust and Others
(Continued from Page 1)
remain firm despite the commercial
banks' move.
[On the other hand, should the
UB. rate cut prove symptomatic of
a general economic sl o wd ow n and
a decreased demand for funds, the
Eurodollar rates could be expected
to ease as they already are doing
to some extent. This, in turn,
would take the pressure out from
under individual national rates.
[But any such slackening in
demand, it is felt here, will most
likely take some time to be feltj
Manufacturers Hanover Trust,
the fourth largest bank in the
country, said that It is not now
considering a change In Its rate.
ELS. Northrop, vice-chairman of
Manufacturers, called the reduc-
tion -premature'’ and “not justifi-
ed while banks continue to find it
necessary to use substantial Euro-
dollars and other funds at the
prevailing rates.”
A spokesman for Continental
Illinois National Bank & Trust
Co, eighth largest in the nation,
said: “The move seems premature.”
However, political considerations
and a quest for a better public
Image are also Involved.
The angry congressional reac-
tion to the June rate increase. In
the view of many bankers, was
largely responsible lor the sharp-
ly restrictive one-bank holding
company bill that was passed by
the House of Representatives last
year. The bill Is still in the legis-
lative mill and same bankers be-
lieve that removing the political
liability of the high rate might
win some friend.-, in. Congress.
The question raised by today's
cut is its effect on the gov-
ernment’s anti-inflationary pro-
gram.
The restrictive S percent surtax
expires July l; from both banking
statistics and official pronounce-
ments, it appears that the Federal
Reserve Board has begun to ease
up on its monetary policy and Pres-
ident Nixon has said he will release
some Si -5 billion to help the long-
suffering housing industry.
Making money more available at
a time when business spending
plans both at home and abroad
are mounting would seem incon-
sistent with the administration's
avowed goal of eradicating ‘In-
flationary psychology.”
Eurodollars
March 25. 1970
London
Not
Cl Me
Che*
Overnight ....
9
+ 1-3
t tnj rix ...
9
U
9
— 18
Onn Month ..
3
15-18
8 1316
trnch.
3 Months
8
11 1G
8 9/ 16
- 1.4
One Year
8
V4
8 5-8
- ITS
U.S. Wholesale Price Growth Rate Slows
By Frank C. Porter
WASHINGTON, March 25 (WP).
—Claims that anti-inflationary
moves are taking hold were bolster-
ed today by. a government report
showing that wholesale prices far
March scored their smallest gain
In seven months.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics
said the preliminary wholesale price
index inched up to 116.5 percent
from 118.4 percent of the 1957-59
average this month. It had regis-
tered similar 0.1 percent gains last
July and August. Since then it
had averaged increases of nearly
0.5 percent a month.
Processed foods and feeds drop-
ped a substantial 0.7 percent to
1245— the first decline since Sep-
tember and a possible portent of
moderation of inflation on grocery
shelves. Wholesale prices often
tend to foreshadow subsequent
moves in retail prices. But there
is no guarantee of this and the
correlation is at best erratic.
Of even more moment to econo-
mists was a 02 percent rise in
industrial commodity prices, which
many consider a better bellwether
of inflationary and deflationary
trends than the more popular con-
sumer price index.
This was the smallest rise for
industrials, which now stand at
115.7, since last July.
Consumer finished goods showed
no change while producer finished
goods rose 02 percent. Crude ma-
terials jumped 1J2 percent.
The biggest part of the rise in
industrial prices was caused by
metals and metal products. Ma-
chinery and equipment, chemicals,
motor vehicles, ready-mixed con-
crete, apparel, toys, furniture and
major appliances also rose. Lumber
and wood products, gasoline, tex-
tile synthetics, cotton products,
crude natural rubber and sheep
and lambskins were down.
In contrast to the drop In pro-
cessed foods, term products moved
up sharply, posting a 0.7 percent
rise.
A number of administration
spokesmen have claimed recently
that President Nixon’s anti-infla-
tionary policies are beginning to
take hold.
But todays preliminary wholesale
price Index— which, could, be revis-
ed— is among the few bits of sta-
tistical evidence to bear this out.
In the ladt three months, for ex-
ample, the consumer price Index
has moved up at an annual rate
of about 6 percent, which Is equal
to or a bit higher than the 1969
rate.
-.out of Portuguese
investment.
A lot of service out of our
KNOW HOW
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Page 10
INTERNATIONAL
TRIBUNE* THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1970
GEORG JENSEN
SILVER
ORDERS OVER S100.
CAN BE SKIPPED AT
DANISH EXPORT PRICES
GEORG JENSEN
239 SUE SAfNT-KOKOR*
P ARIS- le r
U BOUTIQUE DANOISE
42 AVENUE DE FRIED LAND
PARIS-Se
GEORG JENSEN
15 NEW BOND STREET
LONDON W.l
GEORG JENSEN
ior 8, rue RorAUE. BRUSSELS 1
CASA DANESE GEORG JENSEN
87 VIA FRANCESO CRKM, ROMA
Toronto Stocks
C]<Hua; prices on March 25. 1970
High LOW Last Ch's«
INDUSTRIALS
7306 Abillbl 11 HP'
2050 Acklondi 9 8% 8*4+ %
140 Aar* V 011 6=k *U 6*
2170 Albta <0% « 40> >+ %
1585 AfSUS pf C 10% 1D*A 10U
1800 All SU9 8’ b 8 8 — Vi
5265 Bfc Nova S r »'« 20%
STM Bell Tel 42% il*U 42%+
185 B C Forest 3314 3ZU 32%+ '*
1510 Block Bros 54k 5*i 5%
2178 Bums 271a 2714 27te+ te
2044) Calg Row ZP* 22% 22^
900 Csn wmalt 21 V* W* 2114+ Ik
S5S Can Pack. 0Ta 2flte »'«— '*
2610 Can Perm Mtg 10*6 HR* 10** + U
1W20 Cdn fm Bk 21% 211* 711k- >i
12663 Cdn Ind Gas 10% 10 1016+ %
150 Cdn Wstgh 11% 11% 11%- >i
6650 Capital Div 2.35 120 Z20
1685 Chemcell 7% W6 m
300 Cofum Cel 7% 7% 7%+ %
3200 Con Build 1.25 T.10 1-25 +.15
6677 Consum Gaa Sib 15% 15%+ %
1420 Crush IKNT
1235 Cygnu* A
2200 CmUlS B
2623 Dorn Fdrs
1825 rt/Pont Can
500 Dylex {div
3086 Falcon
1755. Fmn Play
2400 Fad Grain
935 Fraser
High Low Last Ci’pe
’■'a’i 5 * 14% 14%
S.12 4 AS 100 +.15
4.90 4.80 4.90 +.10
22 2114 21%+ %
23 27 22
7 6% 7 — Vi
178 176 176
17 11% JITw— Ik
6V| ST* &!k+ te
29*4 291k 29%+ %
25 Gen Gist Ca n 11% H% 11%
975 Gl L Pap
28 Gl W Llle
1878 Greyhd Can
545 Guar Tryst
4970 Gulf Can
360 HB Oil G
2891 Hur&Erle
550 Indusmln
1930 Ind Accept
800 I noils
530 Inland Gas
5688 Int P Line
2985 Inv Grp A
23% 23% 23%
113 TlS'-a 113 -1
11U Ilia ll«.i+ '.2
'f'>2 9% Mi
17% 17% 17%+ %
45% 44% 44%+ %
16te 16V* 16%+ V*
ISte 15 15Ui
14% 14% 14%+ %
10% 9% 9 1 '* — 1%
91* 9%
22% 21%
P%— U
22
Bte— %
* How to have your
own individually
managed portfolio of
ULS. Securities
NEW YORK CAP)
—The following quo-
tations. supplied by
the Nolinal Associ-
ation of Securities
Dealers. Inc- are
(he prices at which
these securities
could have been
sold (bid) or bought
(asked) Wsdnsdy.
Bid Ask
Aberdn 2J)7 2J5
Admiralty Funds:
Grwth 7.96 8J2
Mutual Funds
CSomt; prices on Mtfeh 25, 1970
Bid Aik I Bid Ask
Comp Pd 9.19 9.99 Imp Gfh 7.04 7 M
Corns *k unavall Inc FdB 6.60 7.23
Concord 13-26 13-26 indepnd 8.01 BJH
Consol In »4>0 11.75 Ind Tmd 12.421347
ConSU In 3-97 4.34 indstry 5J6 5.75
Conti Mi 8.13 8.13 INTGN 9.6310.42
Cont Gttl 9.1? 9-28 Inv CoA 12451340
Corp Ld T4J12 15.42 Inv Guid 8.99 • .99
Cnlv Cap 1242 1341 Inv Indie 946 946
Cm WDlv 6.23 6.81 lnv«s Bos 11.901341
Cm WDal 9J110.39 investor* Group:
Incom
iraur
Advisrs
Affiliald
Afutre
AJIAm F
3.85 4.22
7.79 844
5.45 5.96
7.03 7.60
847 849
.78 45
deVgh M 6348 6348
Decat Inc 1145 1240
Delawre 12420 13.33
Delta Tr 7.78 840
bewnf D 545 6.19
Drexel 1447 1447
IDS ndl 4.42 4.81
Mut 945 1047
Prog 443 4.71
Stack 17.98 1945
Select 8.80 9.4)
Ver Py 745 7.88
Allst Ent 9.98 9.98
Alpha Fd 11.0912.12
Amcap
Am Bus
543 6.4
3.10 346
A Clear Road To Alert,
Continuing And Professional
Management of You®
Personal Account
f. Return tte coupon at tfee red if
this announcement to ds is year
first step.
2. We will tattediatety letar* Ml
infamutiDR, tte booklet ami fonts
te you.
3. If you decide to join tbe Spear
Investment Management plan, yon on
then open your account with any eon*
renieut office of several New York
Stock Exchange Member Finns wi ft
whom we are dealing . ..we win rae-
ammefld one to yon depending M jw
exact location and address.
That Is all yon have to do . . . yeur
portfolio will be yonr own Mwidoai
account in yonr same. Other Mata
wiJ) be Mien care of tor yon.
4. Our staff of analysts will then go
to work, studying yonr portfolio ami
preparing a long-range growth objec-
tive program for yonr U.& Securities.
5. Yon will receive inmfise eou-
firmatian of all tra n sac ti o n s, mutely
summaries, and periodic evaluations
of yonr account You can, if yen wish,
withdraw at any time.
Of course there is ink in file mdret,
and losses da occur. However, fin
Spear investment Management Plan,
which employs toe most modern com-
puters, expert research and toe rieffis
of investment spetiafisis has prov e n
most helpful in achieving conservative
capita/ growth tor investors with capi-
tal ranging from toe minimum $10,000
on upward. Onr fees are modest
and reasonable.
Tbe fact-filled booklet. Declare tar
Own Dividends" will gwe you mock
more detail about Decision Manage-
ment Send for it today. There k bo
charge or obliptian.
rrrj spear & sure me.
} | Dept. MtU-328
1 “ " inrasUncwt M a— g ei n rxl muire
Babson Part. Mbs. USA. 9XIST
Please senfl me details on bow fo Mm
K own Individually managed portfolio of
. Securities, and the booklet "Dacfar*
Your Own Dividends." Ho cost or obliga-
tion. pi course. Confidential mfoimttms
My accoont wooM amouot to abort
Am Dvln 9.88 1048
A Ex spl 844
Am Grlh 5.72 645
Am Inu 649 6.29
Am Mut 8.46 945
AmN Glh 240 3.17
Am Pac unawa
Anchor Group:
Cspif 840 9.10
Grwth 11.461246
Inane 7.91 8.67
Fd Inv 8-77 947
Apollo Fd 644 749
Assoc ia 145 1.37
Astron 546 5.95
Axe Houghton:
Fund A 545 6.03
Fund B 746 843
Stack 6.16 6.73
Sci Cp 4.83 545
Babson 8J4 A74
Beacon 1345 1345
Berg Knt 8.94 8.94
Blair Fd 1040 10.93
Bondsflc 6-U «J1
Boston 51 749 840
Bust Fdn 10431141
Boston 746 846
Broad St 12.94 1349
Bullock Calvin:
Bulldc 1345 1546
Candn 1844 20.16
Divld 345 3.90
NalW S 9471048
NY Vnf 17411948
BlisM Fd 7.98 8.75
CG Fd 846 9.47
Capamr 7.77 841
Capit Inv 344 441
Captt Shr 646 742
cent Shr 1145 72.40
Channing Funds:
Balan 1041 1141
Com St 146 140
Grwth 540 641
Incom 7.16 743
Sped 2.40 242
Chase Gr Boa;
Capit 7.74 846
Fund 10.1711.11
£122 F d n Tnv Resh 4 49 4 91
Dreyf Lv IZJD 73 47 lste] 18.271844
EafonS. Howard: Ivy 7.71 7.71
Balan 942 10J3 J Hneodc 7.63 849
Grwth 1Z2I 1344 Johnstn 2«M9 20^9
Incom 5.96 641 Keystone Funds:
Spool 9441041 Apollo 9.05 9.92
Stock 13451440 Cus BT 18^71948
Eb erst 13.3^1346 Cus B2 1944 21.43
Egret 1249 1346 Cus BJ 842 943
Emrg Sc 6.70 742 Cus K1 742 844
Energy 12.75 12.75 Cus K2 4.94 5.39
7.44 CUS SI 1747 19.17
•42 942 Cus 52 7.754044
1744 1942 Cus S3 746 7.93
1546 Cus 54 4.78 5.22
12L45 1341 Polar 349 447
10^5 1142 Knkkb 6.85 741
Equt GHi 1744 1942
Essex 1546
E verst In 12U5 1341
Fairfd 10-45 1142 Knickb 6.85 741
Farm Bu 10421042 KnrcJc Gl 94a 10.49
Fed Grth 1245 T4JM Lex Grlh 10 J1
Fid Cep 1146 1241 Lex Rsch 14.9116.30
Rd Fund 15.151646 Liberty 5.83 6J7
Fid Trod 2247 24.99 Life Stic 547 649
Financial Prog: Lite Inv 745 3.26
Dyrnn 5.99 64S Line Nat 9.99 10.92
Indust 440 448 Ling 4.T0 4M
Incom 6.14 6.72 Loomis Sayles:
Vent 749 8.30 Canad S6M3AM
FstF Va 1040 11.15 Capit 1045 10.55
FstF Va 1040 11.15 Mut 13.7613.76
Fstln Dht 840 847 Magna In 8.15 8.91
Bid Ask
Pion Fnd 1143 12.60
Plan Inv 10.471144
Price Funds:
Grwth 23.93 23.93
N Era 947 947
N Hor 25J? 2549
Pro Fund 9.85 945
Provdnt 4.49 4.91
Puritan 9.80 10_71
Putnam Funds:
Equit 8.28 745
Georg 1340 14.75
Grth 9.73 10.63
Incom 7.76 8^8 1
Invest 6.96 741
Vista B.90 9.73
Voyag 740 8J0
-p Tech 441 4J2
Revere 11.161240
Rosenlh 6.70 7.32
Salem Fd 5^6 5.97
Schustr 15.05 1647
Scudder Funds:
Int Inv 15461541
Spcl 32.72 32 J2
Bel 14.90 U.90
Com St 10.20 1043
Sec Epuit 3J3 344
Sec Inv 747 B.05
Setae Am 945 1022
Sei Specs 144116.19
Sh Dean 17.98 17.98
Side 9.79 10.73
Sigma 943 la .09
Sig Inv 10.60 1148
Stoma Tr B.6T 941
Smllh B 9.T7 9.17
; Svm Inv B46 944
Swlitv Gt 7.04 741
Sovar Inv 1346 14.63
spectra 822 9.01
; StFrm Gt 544 544
stale St 45.00 46.00
Steadman Funds:
Am ind 943 1045
Flduc 647 7.09
Sc tan 3.99 447
Stein Roe Fds:
Fst InGth 8.77 9.61 Manhtn 640 649
Fst InStk 8.47 948 Mass Fd 1040 11.29
Fst Multi 841 8.95 Mass Gth 11.72 12. 1
Fst Nat 741 748 Mass Tr 14.63 75.99
Fst Stent 4241 46.94 Mates 545 5.05
Flet Cap 640 Mathers 11.4211.42
Flet Fnd 5.95 MldA Mu 5.73 646
Fla Gttl 6J3 6.91 Moody CP 12.51 1347
Fnd Gth 545 54$ Moody's 1240 13.77
Found rs 847 842 MIF Fd 6.29 8.96
Foursq 9.66 1046 MIF Gth 541 5.85
Franklin Group: Mu OmG 4.96 549
DNTC 9.25 10.14 Mu Offlln 9.74 1049
Grwth 648 6.9$ Mut Shra 154815.08
UNI 641 7.13 Mut Trsl 244 244
Incom 2.14 245 NEA Mut 10.38 1049
Freedm 7.61 8.34 Nat Ind 9J0 9.80
Fd frMut 9.03 9.83 Nat Invst 7.61 843
Fund Am «46 9.93 Nat Secur Ser:
Gen Sec 9.97 9.97 Balan 1044 11.30
Bal
Cap Op
Stock
Sup IriGt
SupInSI
Svncr Gf
1843 1343
049 8.89
1346 13.26
6.7B 7.43
9-49 10.40
9.90 10.82
TMR Ap 16.1317.63
Technd 5.70 641
Technol 7.14 7.78
Temp Gt 25.10 27.43
Towr MR 5 M 6.19
Tran Cap 744 7.87
Tudor Fd 15.131644
Twrf Gt 349 3.11
Twnc Int 4.19 448
Unit Mut : .83 1044
Uni.'d 9.17 1042
Un Capit) 8.07 947
United Funds:
1050 Jockey Cl
5S1QQ Kaiser Resour
163 La bait J
100 Lk Oni Ccm
50 L Secord
225 LQblaw A
5100 Loblaw B
1830 Loeb
2497 MacM B(
50 Maple Mill
57 65 M oore
5293 Nora fid
15564 Nor Clt G
2840 QSF ind
6002 Olhawa A
1190 Pembina
200 Petrafina
440 Rothmans
50 Sco Its Rest
41602? Seaway Mult
585 Shell Can A
3853 Slmpsn Ltd
399 SfmpSrs A
812 Slater St)
5006 Steel Can
1425 Super Pet
200 Teledyn Can
3166 Texaco Can
3826 Tor Dm Bk
45150 Trad Group
20 43 Trans Can
1025 Trans Mt
555 Un CarbCan
5118 Un Gas Can
300 Un OCa n
300 Varsalile
490 Wainsco
1350 Weldwood
25S6 Weston A
325 While Pass
MINES
4300A Rouyn
19947 Beth Cop
1300 Bralor
3375 Bran MS
1300 CamHo
TI6Z5 Can Tung
1742 Casslar
3030 Chmakry
550 Coch Will
6900 C Morris
3200 Conwst
84G0 CoTperf
1200 Crgmt
3607 Denis
IBM Dickens
700 Disc Mns
■4520 East Suit
7200 Endako
3140 Gortdm
2060 Granlslo
4370 Gunnar
20D High Bel
700 Moiling
1740 Inti Hair
1545 Int Mogul
3800 Km Kolia
3563 Karr Ad
260 Labrad
5760 L Duflt
23 La Luz
912 Lellch
210 LL Lac
1382 Macasse
400 Madsen
3525 Matlag
1201 New con
6000 New Imp
11625 Opem
3700 Orcban
500 Pamour
6041 Patino
3415 Pine Pt
1600 Rayrodc
11848 Sherritt
7500 Siscoe
2460 Sleep R
6588 Sullivan
500 Teck A
5225 Trbag
200 Un Keno
5700 Upp Can
7560 w Mines
8690 Willroy
3250 Yk Bear
High Low Last OTg*
440 4J0 *M — .W
• 19 18 ’ i 19
28 27fc 27%
2.45 2.45 ^45 +.1Q
IT 9 * 11% 11%
6% 6% 6%+ %
Pi 6% 6'i+ »«
5% 5’4 5>s+
32'i 37% 323i+ 4«
1714 tr, 17»i
37^% 37 37'i
New York Stock Exchange Trading
— iCTj — stocks and Sis. Net < _ injn __ stocks and Sis. Net | — 1970 — Stocks and Sh. JW
High. LOW. Dtv. In s lC3s. First. Hi^i Low Last, cti'go I High. Low. Dlv. in s 100s.. First. Hlflh low Last. Chge | High. Low. Ota. m s lMt. First High Low Last. COM
(Coctmued iron Page 8).
194* East Air Ll« 743 m* 18 17
34 U East GF JCB
19 East Util 1.40
7SH EesKtdak Vt
SR* EarcnY a U0
26 Editing .78
2lTi Eckert J JO
Z« EdlaonBros 1
308 30*4 31'i SOU
6 29U TtKa »>.,
675 m. tOf* 79
99 367| 387, 3634
61 SISl 23 3F*
T7H+ %
3Ua+ 34
20U+ U
791-4+ %
36»4+ U
32+7j
57 VPi 28% 26*8 28 +2
2 3 r-s ars 2Ta 2T-s
35 'a
35
3514+ ’i
23’*
15
EG&G .10
•4
15iJ
16
1S<*
15*'8+ 18
13te
1248
12*4+ '*
7?»
JHEIMuse 18a
157
F»
6
S?4
ST.+ Vi
7U
6%
714+1
"iiMin ro.ua
26
5 »«
6
5*8
19
I7H
19 +i’i
1T*&
7*t
Elect assoc
48
ft
r*
8
!'■+ %
23te
W*
3M1+ 5 ,
to*
23
Ei Men Mae
4 «
?4'a
?7=*
34:«
2618+ J IS
15
14Tb
IS + *k
28<*
21*;
ElMMau DM
57
23*k
23
221*
72K+ %
18
18
« - la
9-»
7
EHurura' lad
26
f:
ark
«'a
8te+ %
MA 9\i 914
IS 1 '# Bit 12 j .4+2’i
28 to 28
HVi 18W W.S+ ’i
25 25 75 + V.
13% 13% 13U
22 % 22 U 22 %— %
36 36 56 —1
9 6 Vi 81b- 1<9
22% 22 22U— U
22 2114 31%- %
10 % 10 % IO%+ %
27% 27% 271*+ %
15% 15% 15H+ %
13% 13% 13%+ %
I4'.i 14% H%+ !t
42% 42 42 —
4.00 Z.H 3.90 —.10
3 JO 3.30 3JD +J5
19 18% 18%+ U
23 22*. 22%+%
21% 21V* 21VO- %
17% EIPasoNG I
23% EirraCo TJ0
55% Enter Elec 1
52 EmeryAir to
3S Emhert )to
25% EmpDisi Ito
23% EmporC to
ZU* End jetnsa
129 19'. 1 20 19%
25 24 2*% 24
136 61 63% 61
67 58% 61 »i
13 40'.a 41 l i 40%
11 26% 27% 20U
12 24% 25 24' 1
5 25% 25*4 25*1
4 End/chn pf4 2300 46% 47U 46%
21% EnsihMIn A0 205 23 1 4 2624 ZT.i
133 Eng M pf4 J5
15 Ennis Bus 33
30% EgotGas 2 JO
21 ESB Inc Ito
lr.V Esgulre JO
25% Euexmt 130
IS Ethyl Cp .U
28% Eltiyl pt2M
>8 Eurofad UOg
Eurta tnlJOs
33*i EvansP Mb
25*» Eversharo
22 ExCeHO 135
1 153 153 153
IS '5 15% 14%
11 33% 3ZTi 3t**
2* 24% 24% 24' i
12 16% 16% 16%
69 25*4 26% 2Pi
108 iKs 18% 17%
23 31 31% 31
8 19'.* 19*8 191s
1 IMS 16^8 16%
84 36' 4 37% 36%
181 2A*i JB'-j 267a
133 2514 261i 25%
.84 SI
30.12 19.62
.84 — jn
20 JB .%?
3.15
3.00
3.00
+.10
6J0
6 to
6 JO
2.90
2. 85
2J5
-.05
2 MS
ito
2 MS
+J0
17j62
17 Jo
17.62
—.12
245
1.95
2.00
+MS
45
J5
J5
—to
240 2.70
1340 13.12
1.49 142
12.00 llto
39.00 3740
245 1.9S
140 145
7.75 7.10
1345 12.62
440 4J0
16.37 1645
1M 142
445 445
29to 29 JO
4 JO AM
13J0 13.12
2J5 2.90
1347 1342
2845 2845
17.12 1647
11 JO 11 JO
242 241
2.4S 2.4 5
1.44 1.40
1.32 1.30
2SJ0 25.12
7.40 740
7.75 240
14J» 13.75
340 3.65
2.35 248
47 JO 43.00
33 JQ 3240
1.78 US
24.25 2347
2.75 245
195 3.90
8.00 740
7.41 7.15
1.14 1.12
6.75 645
2.10 T.90
445 4.10
1.10 1.10
2.75 —MS
13 JO —45
1AB +46
1145
38 JO +1.12
1.9$
145 —46
7.15 +.10
1245 —45
4 JO —.10
1645
142
445
I 2940 ‘45
4JQ —to
13.12 —.37
2.95 —.03
1347 +45
2845
17.12 +45
II JO
242 +42
2>G +.10
1.44 —41
1.32 +43
25.12 —.12
7.40 +.15
245 +.03
1440 +.12
340
245 +.10
4740 -45
33.12 +145
7.75
24.12 +.63
246 —44
3.95
8.00 +40
740 +.15
1.12
6.7J -.15
245 +.15
445 +45
1.10
Fmt
Stirhd
Sped
Chemcl
! Colonial:
Equty
Fund
Grwth
Vent
86.95 9041
IOJ? 11.68 |
8J9 9 to '
1748 18.99
4.24 443!
10.791149 I
6.15 6.72
544 630
Gen Sec 9.97 9.97
Gibrattr 11J1 1TJ1 Bond 540 5.79
Group Sec: Divld *43 442
Apex F 7J8 849 Grwlh 8.98 941
Bal Fd 8J2 9.32 Pt Slk 6J3 7.14
Cbm St 12401344 Incom 541 5J9
GrthFd A 7.74 740 Stock 8.04 «,79
Grlh Ind 20.4720^47 Nel Grlh 9431043
Gryphn 14.041544 Neuwth 21.17 21.17
r ccm
Incom
Scien
Vang
UFd Can
6.B0 7.45
13.96 1440
74: 8.04
843 9J1
8.32 949
Oils & Gas
4420 Alminex
5.35 5.05 5.05
Col Grth 1249 12J9
Commc 8.93 936
ComS Bd 4.82 544
Comtnonwffh Fds:
Cap Fd 8.71 9J2
Incom 8.92 9.75
Invest 8J6 9936
Stack 8J5 944
Cwllh AB 145 146
Cwtth CD 149 142
Comp A* 73.18 7*44
Compet 740 8.00
Comp Bd 8J3 947
Guarttn 24.1524.15 New Wld 1240 13.44
Hamilton: Newton 14.41 15.75 1
HF1 unavail Noreast 15.031543
Glh unavall Ocngph 637 7.40
Hanovr 143 144 Omega 7.11 743.
Harttar 4J2 941 100 Fd 13.961546
Hartwll 12471247 101 Fd 9.34 1041 |
H&C Lev 10471047 One WmS 1448 14.68
Hedb Got 7.84 744 O'Neil 12.32 1247
Hedge 11.431243 Oppenh 7.13 739
Herltge 2J4 240 OTC Sec 10.871141
H Mann l4.*l 15J3 Pace Fnd 9.70 10.60
Hubsmn 5.62 4.14 Penn Sq 7.97 7.97
12471247 101 Fd 9.34 1041
10471047 Orta WmS 14 J8 14.68
7.84 744 O'Neil 12.32 12 J2
11.43 12 J3 Oppenh 7.13 74?
2J4 240 OTC Sec 10.871141
Value Line Fd:
Val Lm 6.91 7J5
Incom 4.84 540
Spl Sit 449 6.87
VnceS IDl 7J1 842
Vandrbt 7.12 7.73
Vangd 4.40 441
Var IndP 4.84 546
Viking 6.47 7.03
WallSt In 11.05 1248
Wash Mu 12.11 13.23
Welllngtn Group:
Explr 22 J7 24.12
2525 Cen Del 12 JO 11.75 12 JO
8385 Clark C 245 145 245
12880 Dyrtam 2.10 2.00 2. 05
5 95 Gt Plain 26.75 26.12 26.12
3250 Nat Pelro 245 2 JO 2.85
5703 Num OG 845 845 845
36''* 25's Faberge JO 58 JPh 28U STlfc
47% 403, FadorA 49b 77 43 44 43
76 «V? FairchC JO 1113 74% 79U 74%
13% 8'- Fair Hill -73g 53 9'a V.i 9'a
19% 16% Fairmci l la 147, 77% 16 7 ,
11% 8% FalStaft .I0p 73 B% 8% 1%
19% 16% Family Fin 1 80 16% 17% 1ft*h
13% 10*i Famteef Inc 52 >1% 11% 11%
IS'.a IP, Far Wes* Fin 160 16% 18% 16%
60 44 FarahMf 40b 24 56 56*4 56
24% 18 FAS Inti .471 217 1BU 19% MU
33% 27% Fodders to 515 31% 321a 31%
37% 23% FedMog 140 62 24% 24% 24%
15% Ula FedPac Elec 39 11X2 12% 11%
19% 16 F Pac pi 1 46 15 16% 16% 15%
23% 20 Fed Pap Be 1 13 20% 21 20%
38% 23 FedSisn5 M 3 26% 26% 26%
39% 33% FedDestStr 1 151 36% 37% 361a
1D% 8% Fed Mis Inv IS 9% 9% 9
25 'll Ferro Cp .70 16 22% 23% 22%
28 22** Fibrebrd JQ 84 23** 24% 23**
28% 23% FtaidOM lto 14 25% 25% 25%
39 33% ittro: 2 S3* 34% 33*6
23% 14% Ftn Federate 838 17% 20% 17%
52% 43% Firtstne 140 47 43% 44% 431.2
<2% 27% Fst Chrt 2J9t 681 38 «fta 38
74% 6IU FstNCrty 2.m 385 71 73 10* i
25=» M FstNatSt JOe S 33% 34 337a
3*% 291-. FTschbctl to 14 33% 33% 33
19% 13*9 FIs hr Fd 45e M 14% 156a 14%
15% 11 F&herSci .16 134 11 11% 11
3*a 1- .Fleming JO 9 ill! 11% 11%
26 21% Fnmkote 1 183 23 24% 23
40*4 30% Fla E Coast 30 37% 37% 36%
22% Wa FM Gas JO 38 21*4 21% 21%
SO 46 Fla Pow lto 58 497a 51 49%
73*4 66% Fla Paw Lt 2 132 73% 74% 7TA
3J’i 20% Fla steel 1 I 22 22 22
34V, 23 FloorCp 1 tot 136 32% 33% 32%
57% 41% Fluor Pf B 3 20 51% 5T% 51%
29% 24 Ftv Tiger .10 118 26*6 28% 26%
25% 79% FMC CP IS ?4 22% 23% 228k
38 34% FMC pEL25 18 347a 36 34%
20 V> 17 FoodPar to 29S 17 ir.'a 16%
1214 10% Foote C8 to 11 HP# 10% 10%
18% 13 Foote Min 41 14’i 17 16U
29 24 Foote Pf2to 9 28% 28*', 28%
46*4 37’i FordMot 2to 752 47 47*4 46*4
3QU 23% ForMcKS to 124 24i.lt 25% 24*6
53% 4Q Kj FMcK pflto 4 43 43 42>0
24 17>4 Fost Whl to 153 21% 23'* 21%
19'4 15V* Fost Wh pf 1 15 17U 17% 17U
sr>3 30% FdKtnro to 54 37 38 37
31*4 2414 Frank Shr to 5 25'* 25*4 2SU
25ik 19*4 FreepSul lto 213 20% 22% 20%
43% 32H FruehCP lto 353 32*a 33% 32%
31% I6I4 Fugue In £lf 119 1612 177b 16%
19%+ as
24%+ <fo
61%+ *4
591S+1W
41 + ^
W*+ *i
25 + *4
25*4 — %
4714+7 U
26*4+1%
153
15la+ %
3Zra+ H
24'.,- ?4
16*a+ %
26*li+ *4
17*4- %
31*4+ *4
19%
l«a
37»s+ %
28 +11a
26%+ lie
374b
44 +1*4
77 +3%
9*b+ %
17*,+ %
8*4+ <4
mHi'i
11*4+ 4 *
17%+T'e
56V4 + 1U
1914+1%
3ZIH-I
24*4+ %
12 + 7a
16%
20%+ 6a
26%+ U
37%+ 4,
9U+ la
231J.+ *,
2414+ %
25%+ %
37*6
1810+1
44' 1+1
39%+lU
711i+I
34 + %
33%+ %
IS*a+lV»
1%— 7a
l*a+ »«
24'9+lla
36*1- U
211-4— %
SPa+Uh
74V4+1
22 + W
33 + Ik
51%
2734+ *4
Z3U+ %
35*1+1
16*',— %
vn+ w
16%
28%
471i+ *4
24%+ 4a
42'.'}— 1
22 %k+l*k
17*4+ *4
38 +196
2594+ V,
21 %+lHi
33U+ \\
161 2+ tk
38% GAC Cp 1J0 1403 4194 43 41%
12 GAF Corp to 126 13 13** 12*4
13503 Permo
4600 Petrol
IJ2 1.11 1.15
1.25 1.16 1J0
16060 Place G 1J9 lto 1 J9
4200 Range 8.60 8to 8.40
6600 Spooner
26162 Triad
7.90 230 2.70
3.80 3.65 3.70
2D GAF pflto
20K Gam Ska 130
24 GamS pfIJS
22*4 GamS prito
25% Gannett to
4*4 Gar Wood
28 2Di)t 209a 20*4
10 23*k 24 23*4
3 26 261a 26
13 24*4 25 24*4
15 25*4 2514 25%
2 flt A S4
I CM Fml 735 8.05 Phlla 13.901523
1SI Glh 4.95 541 Pilgrim 0.98 9.B1
ISI Inc 4.61 5.04 Pilot 733 8.01
Impact F 934 ?Al Pine St 10.82 10 J2
Imp Cap 9.08 9J7 Pkm Ent 7.00 7J5
Ivest
Morg
Trust
Welttn
WIndr
West ind
Whitehll
Wincp Fd
Winfield
Wise Fd
Worth
14.99 16JS
9to 10.30
10.7211.72
11.14 12.17
9J7 !0to
6.65 737
13A3 14.24
7.19 7.B6
J.87 5.32
6J8 7.20
2J6 2.90
10990 w Decal 6.00 5.45 5.70
Total sales 3J20.D00 shares.
Montreal Stocks
Ask for our recent brief on
OWENS-ILLINOIS, INC
OPPENHEIMER, NEWBORG & NEU
Members of New York and American Stock Exchanges
120 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10005
Cable: rihilo*
Zurich:
Oppenheimer, Newborg & Nen, A.S.
10 Waldhnanstrasse
Tel.: 051/320555/56 - Telex: 52798/99
(Amsterdam:
Kept John I. Meijer
484 Keizersgracht
Tel.: 65358 - Telex: 12466
2365 Aigoma
215 Asbestos
7675 Bank Mont
400 Can Stmship
550 CAE Ind
1925 Cdn indust
900 Cdn Int Paw
1730 Con Bath
100 Cm Zell A
100 Dorn Text
7795 imp Tab
70000 Jam p Svc
16075 Matson A
HO Mil Trust
13*4 13% IS*
26% 36 26
lfii.9 16V, 16%+ *4
20 26 58 +2*6
5.00 4A5 4.85 —.05
11% ll’i 11%+ *4
33 30*4 33 +2%
22 21*. 22 + V*
21 21 21 +14
12*4 12*4 12*4
15% 14*4 15+14
J0 . J0 JO
17*4 17% 17%+ Vi
32U
25*k GardDen 1.30
36
31*8
32%
31*k
18-4
161; Garlock to
6
18
18
17%
11%
71* Gatewav ind
3B
71.8
714
7%
16%
15 Gcmn Cop
17
16
1616
16
m*
10
11%
11*8
1114
28H
22 GnAlnv Itoe
18
237*
23%
231*
39
30 GAmO) JOb
147
34%
34%
33te
39
33% GAT ran lto
110
39
39
3B%
50
46 GATm pf2JD
3
49%
»
49*6
500 Phoenix Can O 73S 735 735
1555 Power Cp
71175 Price Co
8235 Royal Bank
2000 Shrinberg A
4325 Velcro Ind
Total sales 1
12*4 Gen Banc J6 29
16*4 GnCabta toe 516
18*4 GVEN CiB lto W
20% GnDevei J>4f 64
11*4 GenDynam 1 225
67*4 Gen Elec 2J0 864
12 GnFlrep ,i4e 16
77 Gen Fds 2.60 304
Gen Host 38
17** Gen Inst J4f 2a
35 Genlnstr pf3 7
32% Gen Mills to 113
56*8 GMMs pflto 6
.64 Gen Mot A5e 1262
71 G Mot 5pf 5 1 1
73% 13% 73foS %
t 22*k 22% 22ia— *4
\ 13*4 13% 13V*— V.
27 26 27 +1
1,671,900 shares. ‘
1 21a 13% 12%
23 24% 23
28% 2814 28*4
23% 24*4 23%
25*4 26 25%
72% 75% 72*4
12*1 12% 12*8
84 85*4 84
11% 11*6 11%
20% 22*4 20*4
37*4 38% 37*6
36% 36*4 36
5116 6114 6114
73*4 76% 73*4
74% 75% 74%
55% 56% 5516
24*4 2514 24%
V/hcz. ia Washington, D C
"Our 24th year"
ME AT
MA ME
56 52 G Mot pt3to S 551A 56% 5516
25*4 19%'GenPCem to 97 24*4 2514 24*4
25% 22*6 G Pub Lit 2*6 23% 24% 23%
13*4 9*4 Gen Refract 63 10*4 11*4 10*4
70*8 53)6 G«n Sis lto 22 6Q% 61% 6014
116 94 Gen Sig pf 4 19 102 10314 101
16' 4 13% GenStllnd to 23 1«* 15% 14*4
5304 26% G Tel El lto 571 31% 32*4 31
43*4 38*8 GTelEl Pf2J0 6 41*4 42*8 41*8
17 16 GTelF pflto 7240 17 17% 17
31*6 19% GenTime to .62 1974 20% 19*s
20*4 17*4 Gen Tire lb 43 19% 20% 19%
29*4 26% Genesee lto 34 27*4 28% 27%
12% 104* Genstar tog 3 11% 11% 11%
42*6 37% GenunP 1.12 2 41*4-41*8 41«k
53% 45% Ga pac tob 306 48*4 50% 48%
7516 65 Go Pac Pfl.64 8 69 70*1 67
53 46% GaPoc pfl.40 7 48% 50% 48%
40*4 35 Garber lto 231 35% 37*4 35%
50% 43 GettvO Itoe 16 45 46 45
18% 16*6 Getty pH to 3 17 17% 17
42W+%
13%+ *4
20 %— %
34 + H
26%+ V*
24%+ %
2574+ Ik
&*— 1i
32%+ *8
17*8+ %
FU+ *4
16%+ %
11*4+ %
23*4- •»
33*4— *4
»%- %
50 +%.
13i4+ *4
23*4+ 14
38*4+ V4
24 +1%
351.4 — %
73%+2%
12*4+ *4
86*4+ *6
11*4+ %
2114+1%
3B%— V8
3614- *8
61%— W
75%+2%
74%
56VS+ %
25 + %
23*4+ %
11*4+1
61V4+1%
103%— %
14*4+ %
» + 1 %
42*4+1*4
17%+ %
19*4.
20 +%
2894+1%.
11 %+ %
41*4+ %
50% +2
7DV4+2W
50%+l%
36*4+1%
46 + %
17%+ *8
NEW ISSUE
AUof these securities haring deen sold, this imnouncement appears as a matter of record only*
March, 1970
H
8QHEYHEI
600,000 Shares
Honeywell Inc.
Common Stock
Oto Taira *L50ftrStaH»
DILLON, BEAD & CO. INC.
BLYTH & CO„ INC.
Eastman Dillon, union SEcnsmns & Co.
The Eirst Boston Corporation
dbexel Hakriman Bepuet gloee forgan Staats
Xneonra rated lacorperateft
% HORNBLOWEB &WEEKS-HEMPHIIX, NOTES
Halsey, Stuart & Co. Inc. hornblower & weeks-hemphill, notes
LAZARD FJRHIES & CO. LEHMAN BROTHERS LOEB, RHOADES & CO. MERRILL LYNCH,
Paine, Webber, Jackson & Cdktts Salomon brothers & HumER
Stone & Webster Securities Corporation Webthem & Co. White, Weld & Co.
A. G. BECKER & Co,
Incorporated
PffEK, 3 Aims & HOPWOOD
Incorporated
Kuhn, Loeb & Co.
GOLDMAN, SACHS & CO.
Kidder, Peabody & Co.
Incorporated
Pierce, Fenner & Smith
Incorporated
Smith, Barney & Co.
■ Incorporated .
•Dean witter » Co.
ZacorywaleA
dain, Kalman & Quia
Incorporated
algemene bane Nederland n. v. American express SEcratmEs S. A. banca Commerciale Itauana
Banque de I’Union parisienne C. F. C. B. Banque be Paris et »es Pays-Bas C ommerzban k
Credit Commercial de France The Datwa Securities Co., Ltd. Deutsche Bank
kredietbankN.V. N. m. Bothschud & sons - Swiss bank Corp ora tion (Overseas)
ZrlmltM
Union bank of Switzerland (Underwriters) Limited . • S.G.WAfflsuRG&Co.
• S. g.warburg & Co.
■ »>»
a% Giant PC toe
16*8 Glbratt- Fin-
11 Glad Lew to
42% Gillette 1.40
38% Gtanbet Br 1
3k*8 Gnos Inc
7>4 Glen AMen ■
57 GlanAI pf3.1*
5T GtenAld pf 3
32 GlanAI pOto
Mi* Global Marti
151.4 GKJbCUn to
29% GbOdrch 1.72
251.4 Goodyear to
21*4 GordJtyA 34
28% Goo W inc lto
21 Va GracnCo 1JQ
31 Granby lto
24 GrandUn to
11*4 GranteC Stl
1514 Gran I evil* t
45*4 GrantW lto'.
50 Grant pf 3.75
23*4 GrayDrg lto
25% Gt ASP 13
IPaGmorlr ttos
44H-GtNaPflP lto
12% GtNWP pfto
16% Gt W8ft Fnl
18 GtWnUnt .90
^ GWVJn pnto
121a GtWathla to
25 GrwGnt M
18%i GmnSh 1,20
15** Greyhound 1
23 Groler .90
18 GrummnCp 1
33 GlfLlHId toe
65 GlfMOh 2toa
2414 Gulf Oil lto
9 Gulf Reins
13 GuttRea otto
18 U GullStaUt .96
63 Gulf SU Pf S
57% GulfSU pfkto
16*4 GulfWtn toa
55 GutfW pfl.75
6Hi GUlfW pf3J0
45 GulfW pf3J7
11% Gull on ind
M 9% HR.
531 3Hi Mlu
47 13U 121:
2153441a 451a
35 39 Vt -40V*
132 38*8 40%
121 t 8%
5 58'J 67
2 5514 56
1 32% 32%
34 16% U%
8 16 16%
12S 30% 3P8
376 27*8 28*4
20 22*4 nr,
11 31*4 3TT*
IBS 22% 24
52 37 V» 37%
42 27% 28%
22 14T, ISte
9 15% 15*8
ITS 47 48
210 S3 53
7 24*4 24%
39 27 27%
11 13% 13%
78 <7% 47%
7 13*4 13%
2212 31% Z3U
509 18% 20%
10 2114 21%
77 12% 13
4 25% 25*i
12 34 24%
1ST 16% 16%
19 24% 251 2
32 19*, 19'k
94 40% 41%
5 7W4 70%
824 SHe XPm
37 W« 10*1
3 15% 15%
776 24 l4 T ,
210 66 66
280 60 60
116 17% 18%
2 55% 57
1 76% 76*i-
3 46% 47
58 11% ITT,
91s 10*i+l
21 ‘ a 22*4+1*8 ■
12' 1 12*4+ ».4
44% 44%
3PW 3 9*4+ %
3B*i
. 8 f*a+ *a
5814 62 +3%
6514 54
32% 03%— tu
14*8 15 + *•
.16 16+»8
SKk 31 + %
27 . a .+ %
33*5 23*4- %
31 31?k+ %
22% 23' r+ *4
36?, 37%+ %
27% 2B«H- %
14% 15ik+ *4
15% 15%
46 f * 47*4+ r M
53 ' 53 +1
34*8 24*a+ *8
27 37*8+ »8
13 13 •— U
47 47
13*8 13*8
21% M’k+%
TIP, 20U+1%
21% .21%+ »m
13V 12*8-%
25*1 2Pi+%
24 24*a+ %
16% 16%
24% 2S1«+ 18
19's 19*4+ *a
40% 4D<.r+ %
70 70%+ %
26*8 37% +1%
10 % 10 ‘»'
15% 1S%+ V*
24 MVr+T
66 6i
\S? » — %
17'» 17%+ %
56% 57 +1
76*i 76*4+515
46>.8 47
11 % 12*i+l*i
Wmm
iifwHrtliri
37 34 HackWat 2to 3 35*4
38% 35% Hall Frt to 2-«P4-
51% 40*« Hallburt 1.05 761 42*«
12% 914 HamWa .lot 29 10%
27% 2215 Hamm POP 1 41 • 24*8
16ta 11 Hammnd JO 116 11%
47*k 40 Hand Inin to 70 42
31*4 26* aX Hand Har 32 10 2814
17% 11 Vi Kanos Cp to 88-13*8
47% 37% HantUtM lto 139 47*0
62% 50% Harcourt 1 65 51%
75 61% Harris Int 1 70 65%
22% 1914 Hnrsco CP 1 17 20%
33% 25 HertSMrx to- 26 26'.4
23 19 Harv Al lto 24 19%
9% 7*. Hat Corp 40 2 74b
31% 28 HawiiEI 132 11 2948
17% 14% Havas Alb t 23 14Pb
l»« 12% Hazettine 37 13*8
33% 25% HedBMrtg Jo 21 30%
371k 32 Heinz HJ .92 SB 361b
16% 10% Helene Curt 107 16%
30% 19 Hell Coil to 17 20%
22?i 18% Heller Int .60 236 23
TOO 86V, Heller pf,.ai 2 99%
2l*i 17 Hehnapds 1 23 19%
20*8 16 HelmrhP to 24 19%
4% 4*b Hemlsph Gap 97 4%
8 6*4 Hemline JOe 14 6*,
32V, 23% Here Inc toe 502 29*4
26% 217k HershFd 1.10 12 24*8
45 39*4 Heubtetn to 44 42%
45% 43% Hew Pack JO x!3i 44*8
22*4 10% High Voltaga 1X7 11%
60% 44 H r iron Hotel 1 211 .441.4
43% 40 Hobart lto 12 40*4
25% 20% HoernWal JO 59 21%
10% 7*4 Hoff Electro 45 B*«
47% 35% HoUdylnn 32 3*0 37*4
63% 52 HolUA 1.70b 2 5ffU
24% 16% HoliySug 1J0 IS 17%
21*4 16% Homestka to 50 20%
152 121 Honaywl lto 334 124
33 21% Koov Bl I toa 16 25%
447, 3718 Host Inti J6 13 40
14 6V, Hotel Cp Am 157 7
15% 12% Houd ind JO 42 13%
25*b 20% HOUO Miff to 9 22
44S, 39% HousehF 1.10 305 42*8
132% 117% HOusF pfkto 7 T 27
50% 45 HOUSF pf2JD 25 49*8
6674 59 HousF p(2J7 3 62*i
43% 36% HossILP 1JD 170 4X>k
54*8 47*8 HaustNGs to 24 53%
49 45*4 HooGs pH JO 1 47V,
20*8 1718 How John .24 26 17%
27 77*4 How met JO 75 22*4
17*8 14% Hugh Hat to 7 l4*i
36 Vi 3SU
-35*4 3 Hi
42% 40%
TOU 9*8
24% 24
12*b 11%
431a 42
29 2BV>
mi 13
48*8 47%
5a 51
66% 65%
»% 20%
27 26%
20% 19%
7% 7%
29% 29%
U!i 14
U 13*8
3! 301k
3618 36
16U 15*8
20*4 a%
24 227,
100 99%
19*8 19%
19*8 19%
5*8 4%
6% 6%
30 ' 2918
34*6 2418
<3 42%
45 4«ta
1158 11
47 43%
41 i-i .40%
32*8 21%
K* 8*8
3B*« 37%
58*6 58*4
18 171,
21 . 2014
131% 124
36 2518
41*8 40
7 7
1418 13%
22 23
43*S 43
in 127
50 49%
63 6Pa
4416. 43U
54*8 53%
47% 47*8
17% 1718
23% 23%
15 14*6
36>k+ *8
as 1 .: — %
to 1 *— 1*6
fit- %
2<%+ *8
12%+ %
4258+11,
28%+ %
13»b— *8
48H+1*8
51 — Vi
6618+1%
2D%— 14
26%+ 18
20 + %
7?8+ %
2?’.u— %
l«i+ 14
1318+ *a
31 .+ te
3614 — Is
1518-1
20V*
23*8+ *6
100 +6.-
19*8+ *8
19*8- <8
518+ 46
6%
29%+ 18
24%+ te
42%+ «
4444+ 7 t
11 * 8 + %
47 +3
40*8+ *8
a*8+Ht
816+ V8
38 + %
58*6+1*6
17%+
20%— U
129*8+6*8
25*k+ %
41%+1*8
7
14*8+ *8
22
4311+ *1
ran +416
49*6+ %
63+16
44 +1
54*8+118
*7X5— te
77%
23%+lte-
U +«
k r-t': — f r-^~-
rta
rir'.vxrn
rrm
l^rrrraH
33 2818
13% 11
31*8 25%
53% 45%
35*6 30*6
29*6 27%
29 28
I41.8 10
3616 297*
16 13
1048 914
25 20%
26<8X 16
9>6 6*4
23% M
44 34%
35% 3114
2f% 25
16% 1248
34% 1848
25% 20*6
66 57%
30% 25%
• 30 2514
387 315%
6648 59
2846 24%
1914 15
4346 18%
56 30
14% 1086
• 17 13
46% 39%
« 3216
14% 1046
rm JEFtt
60V8 51%
199 17646'
197 172
182 160%
Idaho Pw lto 14 32% 32% 31*6 3H6— 48
Ideal Basic l 199 13 13% 12% 1348+ te
III Cent 1.14 45 2948 30% 29*1 30 + 48
ill Cen Ptajo 32 site 53 jt% ss +2
III Power 2 117 J54k 36% 3948 3648+1
in Pw PR.10 Z50 29 29 29 29
III Pw pf24M 2400 29 29 28% 28%+ Vt
Imp Cp Am 953 13*6 14 13% 13U+ lk
INA Cp 1.40 250 33% 34% 33*4 34%+ V6
Income Canlt 42 13*6 14% 13U 14%+ te
InC Cum toe 7 10% 10% 10 10—1*
Indian Ho to 50 211* 21% 21 2H8+ '4
IndpIsPL I JO 18 24*6 2<% *4% 24%+ 14
InEIMex J2o 5 /% 7% 7 % 7 T«+ 4*
IndBancp .90 7 20V. 21 30% 21 +1
IngerRand ! 300 42 45*8 42 44*4+2%
InuRd plM5 25 35% 36% 35% 36%+lVb
Inland Stl 2 105 274i 28*8 2744 28*8+ te
InmontCp .76 41 14*8 14*8 14*8 14%+ %
Inal Ico . 70b 189 1846 20 1848 1918+ *8
Ins Ik: pfAlto 4 27te 2146 31% 21*8— %
Insolrcop 30 29 5918 60 59% 5948-%
In term 1.10 10 291k 3048 29te 3«a+ *8
InterikSt lto 9 28 38% 2778 ffl'A+ %
IBM 4JB0 623 330 3 37 329% 333 +5
InlFlaFr JOb 35 40% 62% 60% 62%+2U
Int Harv lto 129 27*6 28% 27*4 2B%+
IntHold 1J3C B 1544 16% 15*4 1616+ 16
Int Indus! 417 21*8 33% 21*8 22%+l'A
Int Ind Irflto 15 33% 35 33% 33*6+ U
Int Miner 1367 13 13*4 ' 13 1 1348+ te
Inf Mrs ;70e . 84 15*8 76% 75% 76%- %
Int Nick lto 468 45% 4646 45% 4518+1
Inr Pap 7 JO 8M 34% 3618 34% 35%+ %
Inti Rectff. 49 H IT 1M8 101%+ 18
rnt Isa! to 1 38% 38% - 38% 38%+ te
Int T81 T 1j 05 687 54% 5Ste 5416 5516+1%
PntTAT pfC 4 Z1D0 183% 183% 183% 183%+3
IntTAT pfD 4 zlOO lBlVk 181% 181% 181%+9%
IntT&T pTO 4 zlOO T68 168 168 168 +7%
IRS
BRITISH- A WT.RTCAN TOBACCO COMPANY LIMITED
Extracts from Mr. D. FL 2ft. Clarke’s speech at the'
Annual G metal Me e ting ;
REPORT
1969
TStbm aznatJUBLY
Group Turnover ■».
1,304.8
Group Profit befboe . -.
Group Profit after. •
BA.T.’s Isforesttfiereih
eus
43 2
Retained by Subsidiaries
31 J
3U
Balance dealt with .
by B-A.T. „
"31-4'
31.7
Dfridrods f Ordinary
4/6d.- 1968 4/3;-.-
gross per Stock unit) ...
273
26 J.
GROUT KBT BSBKTS
57<J
540.9
if you would like a copy of ike Report
and Accounts for 1969 and a copy of
Mr. J>. R. N. Clarkes speech al the
Awmxal General Meeting held on 19th
March. 1970. please 'write to The See*
rotary at 7 MMbattk, London. S.WJ.
The coatinued buoyancy of oor toteixo^busmess was main } 7
responsible for tbe satisfactory increase of some. £ 8 } millioa
in Group profit before taxation. It ^was disappointing that
this was more than offset by a higher tax bffl and larger
minority interests m profits so that BAT stodcholders’
interest in profits after tax fell by £700,000.
Over the last twenty years, during which no equity
capital was raised. Group jirofit before taxation increased
from £31 million to £135 nuUion, while Group net assets
increased from £125 million to £576 million and Ordinary
dividends increased from £3.4 million to £15.7 million net
of income tax.
Perfumery and cosmetics comprise our biggest single
interest other than tobacco. I have better news than last
year, when I told yon changes in the distribution systems and
organisation of the companies in tihe United States would
cause losses.- This phase is now over and Yardky of London
Inc. has consolidated its position.. The performance since
acquisition of Germaine Monteil and its two subsidiaries
Scandia and Tuvacbd* whose main. business is in the United
States, has-been well op to onr expectations. We can expect
a moderate profit from onr worldwide cosmetics interests
thisyear.
The Group's tobacco business costumes to grow. Total
cigarette sales for the first, five months of thc.current year
.were some 5 % higher than for the same period of .the
previous year.
In the absence of major unforeseen factors it is reason-
able to expect Group results for the year to 30th September
not to be rather better than for the .previous year, winch
should permit a further increase in the total equity divi-
dends for tiie year. .
WATCH OUT FOR MONEY!
... If you want TAX-FREE money ... go Austrian Lottery.
... If you want lottery winnings GOVERNMENT GUARANTEED .... 90
Austrian Lottery. . . .. If .yen visit, to .triple, yonr. chances -by entering a
lottery with only 76,000 tickets (instead of the usual far. aver 2 OOfiOO) . . .
go Austrian tottery. ’
4- 56ft .of The ticket* ore wlnoera
+ 1 st prize: & 200 , 00 (LQ 0
+ Rrst drawing days MAY ff
Tote! Pitre Money: $5,000,000! . •
... If you want to know more about the Austrian Lottery, write today,
using coupon, for brochure and ticket' applied tion form to ).B. PROKQPP,
the official’ distributor.
(This odreftisemeflt does not apply to French utrZMsJ
J.B. PROKQPP, MernlOhietrme 29,
Vienna vC' ^ Austria.
Please rend stir
application jnm /or !U» AwOrten
National Potters- '.
NAME
ADDRESS.-
CITS' . .V, i .
<X>UNTRT-
t
Page 11
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grai^mroUi HERAXP tTUBUIVr, THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1970
New York Stock Exchange Trading
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45 «ft 45 +2%
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53 35ft 37ft -35ft 36ft +7 VS
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— ■ iE£n mwin Ai ■ 1D1 71 72ft 70ft 70ft
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54 2» 27U 25ft ZTft+Tft
26 Sift 32 21ft 21VS+ ft
13 24ft 25ft 24ft 24%+ ft
•25 24ft JSV* 24ft 25%+ ft
. . 104 32ft 33ft 32 32VH- ft
Si '.5ft McDonald Cjr 140 41ft 44%. 41% -Oft+1
19ft McDonnD JO 309 20ft 22ft 20ft 73%+ 1
5 Maytag la
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ST »ft McDermott 1
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■ /i 31 McGH PflX
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142 McIntyre 2.
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172 20% 21ft 20% 21*4+ ft
60 U 25 . 34 34%+S
5 5VS 5W 5% 5ft
Z380 167 . 169 M7 1» .+4
6 22 ft 22 ft ‘ 22 % 22 ft+ %
.5 40 « 3M 3W4— %
54 24% 24ft 24 24ft+7
37 15% 15ft 15 15ft+ ft
54 T9ft 20 19ft 20 + ft
5 45 45ft 45 45ft+l%
S 45 45 45 45 + ft
S3 31% 32 ' 31% 31ft+ ft
-51 11 -11% 10ft 30ft— %
66 74ft 75% 74ft 75V4+1
792 118 HBft 111 lll%-2ft
151 102 105% 101ft 104 +3
5 30 30ft 30 30ft+ ft
360 48ft 50ft 41ft 50ft+lft
10 91ft 94ft 91ft 93 +2%
3 91 91ft 71 91ft+1U
90 9ft 9ft 9ft 9ft+ %
27 27ft 27ft 27ft 27ft-
45 26 26% 26 26%+ ft
690 19ft 21 19ft 20%+ %
*10 S3 53 S3 53 + ft
138 . 53% 56% 53% 56 +2ft
5 14ft 14ft 14ft 14ft— ft
- 60 20% 21% 20ft 2Bft* ft
11 18ft W6 18ft 18ft+ ft
315 23ft 24% 23% 23ft+l
- 21 23ft 24 29% 24 + ft
4 67 68 57 60 +2
17 67% 68ft 67 67ft+ %
49 21% 22ft 21% 22ft+lft
W ** MtnnNytt i js an Itt% 1M* in im %+ a%
'*% 17 MlmPLt in 13 19% 19ft
; |8% ' 10% MissnCp 2JS *600 01 ■ 01
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18 MoPobS -80b
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87 55% Miwrtc Data
35ft . 22% Monarch 120
7-BUBB JS
19ft I9ft+ ft
0% ao%— %
17% 17% 17% 17%+ ft
2 66ft 66ft 66 66 — %
47 28 29ft 28 29%+l%
7 19% 20% 19% JoVi+1
475 41% 44 41ft 42ft+lft
60 26% 25% 26ft-2fift+%
337 58% 62ft 58ft 60ft+2
6 22% 22% 22% 22%+ ft
351 23 25% 23 24 +1
1 22% 22% 22% 22%
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25 47 49
J99 34% 35% 34ft
■ 5 % Menu pttTS . ' * S' 4 ££
38% 17ft MnntOUtlJO- S 2?^ SL
7?*. 26 4MOTdPW in 52 31 31ft 31
355
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71 57 NorganJ 2n
X JS14 AtewSho .70
4} 38 Mcr-Nor JO
161% 110% Motonda 1 ■
31ft 27ft M1FW« 1 JO
23% 21ft MtStoTT 1JC.
i9% is MSLjnd n
23% 19% MUMhigwr 1
27% 23 Morphy .in
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76 69 MiupO p6J0
16% 13% MorryOh- JO
4tft+2
35ft+ %
45ft
30 + %
31ft+ %
15% 15% 15% 15%+ ft
68 69% 67% «7ft+ %
4 29% 29% 29ft 29ft— ft
66 30 ■ 31ft 30 31ft+2
^6 110% 126 110% 122 +3ft
20% 2Bft 20% 28ft+ ft
22% 22ft 22ft 22%+ %
15% 15ft 15% 15ft+ ft
21% 22 21% 21ft
22ft 21% 22ft 23ft— ft
9ft 9% 9 9%+ ft
19% 20% 19% 20%+!
.70% 70% 79 70 — %
14ft 14ft 14% 14ft— ft
N
48% 49 NalCO <31
4Qft 26% Narco 5cl JB
43ft 35ft NaUrna^ M
34ft 16% Nat AMhv.40
26% 20% NAwtot lJ6e-
54% ft Nat Bbc -2JD
75% 64- Nat Can JO
67 58 N CW pf m
171ft 129% Ptatcaafi m
•72 .. J3!i WWOww J)
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117 53% 56% 53% 54%+ ft
20 ' 29 20 29 +11*
36% 37% 36% J7%+1%
10% 19 10 lOft+1
21ft 22ft 21ft 22ft+ ft
54ft 54% 54ft 54%
IS
39
239 10% 19
2S
77
34). 67ft 68% 67% 67ft+ ft
2 60% '61 60% 61 +1
160 130 143 137% 131 +2%
10™ «* «
4 15 15 - IS 15 + %
— wo — Stocks and SI*. Nat
High. Low. Dir. In S 100s. Fbst. High l«w Uat. Pi's#
17% 14ft N*T DfrrtI J0 116 17 17% . 16% 17 + ft
25% .23% Hat Fuat 1J8 23 201 25% 2M 25 +%
20% 13 Nat Gem JQ 193 15ft 16ft 15ft 16%+1
24% 18% NatGypS 1JH 338 20% 22 20% Jlft+lft
9% 7 Nat Indrat 86 7ft 8 7ft 7ft+%
13ft 12% NatIVN PF n 12ft 13% 12ft 13%+ ft
20 Zlft'NatLesd jOe 1497 9% 24ft 23 24%+ 1%
29% 25% NatPraalo JO 30 26ft 26% 26% 26%— %
20 16% Mats VC In M 11 16ft. n 16% 17
40% se% Nat stand JS 24 39% 40 39% 39%+ %
20 21% NBtStsrdi JO 22 29 29ft 29 29ft+ ft
42% 37% Nat Stem 2n 5« 40ft 41ft 40 41%+lft
13ft lift Nat Ta* JO 20 12ft 13%. 12ft U%+ ft
15% 13 NatUnEl JO 9 13ft 14 13ft 14 + ft
65% 34 .Notomaa JS. 457 35ft 36ft 35 35%
27ft 22ft Neptona J4 56 26ft-_ 27ft 26 27%+lft
43 27% Nev POW in 27 41% .43% 41% 43ft+1ft
28 - 23ft Newbsrry 1 . 19 25% 21' 35% 27 +lft
52ft 50% Newb pf 3JS Z40 51 51 51 51
23% 20ft NEngEI 1 JS 77 21% 22ft 21% 32ft+ ft
25ft 32 NEngTT 2J6 51 33% 24ft 33ft 34ft +1%
34% 29ft Nmmnt 1J4 102 aft 33ft 32ft 33%+ %
T06 95 Newmt p UJO 3 104% 10» 104% 105%+1
25ft 23 NYHond .150 12 23% 24 23% 23ft+ ft
31% 27% NYStEG ISA 100 30% 31% 30% 30ft + ft
52 49 NYSE pf3j5 2340 49% 49% 49% 49%+ %
17ft 15% Nlag MP 1.10 157 16ft 17% Wft 17ft+ %
63 59 NlagM pf4J5 2490 61. 61 61 61 + %
53% 48 NlagM pf3.90 XlO 51 51 51 51
491* 45ft NlagM ptfjSO Z630 48% 48% 47 48
29ft 17% Ntefl Shr J7c 4 10ft 19ft 18ft mi+Tft
84ft 77% NorfolKWSt 6 47 Uft 83% 80ft 82 +lft
20% 16% Norrtslnd JQ 6 17 17 16ft 17
21ft 18 NoAmCar 1 20 20% 20% 19ft 20 — %
22 17% NAmCool JO 3 20 aft 30 20ft
54% 35 NwAmPbM 1 112 37ft 37ft 36ft 36ft— %
23% 15% NoAmRk 1. 0 215 15% 16% 15% 16ft+ ft
63ft 56ft NoARk p«.75 2 57ft 57% 57% 57%+ ft
20% 16% NoARk pfJJK 20 77 17ft 17 I7ft+ %
15% 13% Noeast Ut .94 94 14ft 14ft 14% 14%+ %
54 49ft NorCodtRy 4 Z230 53 54 53 53 — %
32ft 26% NolllGas 1 J2 39 31 32ft 31 32ft+ ft
29ft 24% NorlnPS 1.14 B ^4 3Mfc 29% »ft+ %
49ft 39ft NON Gas 2JO 88 45% 45% 45% 45%+ %
104ft 99% NoNG pf8J8 Z39D 102 103ft 102 103ft + 1ft
79% 72 HONG pf5J0 *40 80 80 80 80 +2
70% 71 MoNG pfSJO zl00 78% 78% 78% 78%
26% 22% NoStaPW 1J0 57 25ft 25ft 25ft 25%+ %
89ft 86% NSPW pMJO *50 87 87 87 87 +lft
51%" 45% NSPW pf3J0 z2D0 49% 49% 49% 49%
W» 14ft Ntbgalc ng 26 15% 15% 15ft 15%
3Sft 26ft Northrop 1 49 32 32ft 32 32%+ %
36 29 N ortho pnj5 14 32% 33% 32% 33Vr+1%
29 28 NwxtAir AS 340 24% 27 24% 25ft+2
36ft 27 NwtBane in 11 33% 33% 33 33 — %
16% 11% Nwst Ind 263 ISft 15% 15 IS — ft
£6% 48ft Nwtlnd pfA5 31 55% 56% 55% 56 + ft
57 47% Nwtlnd pfC5 25 55% 56% 551* 56%+lft
49 41% NWStln p«4JO 41 48 48ft 47% 48%+1
75% 57% NwstnStlW 2 15 70 71ft 70 70%+ %
32% 26% Norton 1 JO 8 32ft 32ft 32ft 32ft+ Vi
46ft 38% NortSIm lJ2f 222 43ft 44ft 43ft 43ft— ft.
43% 36ft NoSlm pfl.60 73 42 43ft 42 43 + ft
18ft Uft NVF Co 26 16 16% 16 16%+ %
O - P - Q
13ft 10ft Dak Elect J4 24 10ft lift 10% 10% •
27ft 24 OakltePd JO 7 26 26 25ft 25ft— ft
26ft 19ft Occldnt Pet .1 1164 22ft 23ft 22ft 23%+ ft
80 60 OCCldPet pf 4 8 69 71% 69 7U%+3%
79% 60 OccMR pf3.60 38 68% 71 68% 70%+3ft
43% 32ft OCCtdP pfZ26 3 36% 37% 36% 37%+ %
20% 13 Ogden Cp JO 108 13ft 13ft 13% 13ft+ ft
32% 26% Ogden pfl J7 10 26% 27 36% 27 + ft
25 22 OhtoEdls 1J4 115 23% 24 23% 24 + ft
65 60% Oh Ed pf4J6 Z100 63 63 62% 62%+ %
63 57 Oh Ed pf4J4 250 63 63 63 63 +1
56 52% Oh Ed pfljO Z100 55 ' 55 3 55 +1%
23% 19% Ofcla GE 1.16 220 73?h 23ft 22% 23 + *4
IP 16ft OklaNGs 1.12 12 78ft 19% 18ft 1914+ ft
22% 17% Olln Corp J8 171 10 181b 17ft 18%+ %
20% 15ft Omar* Ind If 9 18ft 19 18ft 18ft— %
20% 16 OneidaLI JO 11 19% 19ft 19% 19%+ %
18% 15ft Opelika 1 17 15ft 15% 15% 15%— ft
23% 20% OrangeR 120 41 21% 22ft 21% 22%+ ft
51% 44 Otis Elev 2 144 49% 52 49% 51%+2
27% 21% Outbd Mar 1 ' 42 24% 24% 24% 24%+ %
17ft 75ft Outlet Co J5 22 76 16% 16 16ft+ %
22 17V- Over Trans 1 30 22% 23 22 22%+ %
93% 81ft OwensCg 1J0 . 15 89% 90 09% 90 +1
Owens!? 125 571 56 57% 55 5i+%
63ft 49% _ .
107 86 Owen 1 1 pf+75 2 92% 94 92% 94+2%
16 13ft OxfdlndA JO 21 1C* 14% 14% 14%+ ft
34 20% PacGEI m 323 32 32ft 32 32%+ %
16% 12% PadnExp JO 3 14g5 14ft 14ft 14%
27% 23% PadJff ? M 123 26ft 26% 26ft 26ft- %
29% 23ft Pec Ptrt J5g 96 27% 27% 27% 27%+ ft
20ft 18ft PacPwL 1J8 53 19ft 20% 19ft 19%
27 19 Pac SwJ AIr 95 24% 25% 24% 25 +1
20ft 10g3 PacTiT 1J0 43 19% 20% 19% 20 + %
91ft 82 PacT&T pf 6 ZlOO 90 90 90 90 +lft
18% 15% Pac Tin JOB 81 16 16% 16 16 + ft
20ft 15% PalmBcft J5 41 15% 16 15% 16 + %
16% 13% P8 ASul JW 18 IS 15 14% 15 + U
14% 11% PanArn WAIr 242 12 12% Tift 12 + %
371* 31% Panh EP 1 JO 99 37 37% 36% 36%— 1
34% 29% Paprntt JQb ID 31ft 32ft 31% 32ft+ %
21ft 15 Parras JO 79 16% 16% 16 16%+ %
56% 42 Pargas pf2J4 B 45 45ft 44 44 —1
35ft 27ft ParkeDOTts 1 89 29% 29ft 29% 29%+ %
50% 41% PartcHan I JO 3 44 44% 44 44%+%
23% 17ft Park Pen JO 6 20 21 20 21 +1%
34% 21ft Pom Cent 36924ft 25% 24% 24ft+ ft
18% 14 PennDbt JO 56 16ft lBft. 16ft 18%+1%
13% 10% Pen n Fnilt 9 «% 12ft 12% 12ft- %
51ft 45% Penney JC 1 176 48ft 49% 48ft 48ft- ft
£2 59 n to pf4J2 2 64 64 ^ 63%+ %
mb. U PflPwLt 1.60 64 35 257* 24ft 25%+ ft
45% 59V* PBPL pf +50 z!30 6154 625* 61% 61ft— %
— H70 — ShKta and Sis. Net
High. Law. . Dfv. fa $ WOs. Flraf, High Low Uai. Ofaa
2,^ 5^ E* PL Bf asn am 59 58% ss%
«* Ji 5 ® -« 27% 27ft 27 27%+ %
? g—» If P*2-5B 7 45 45 43U 43ft 4- ft
S' 4 2«s Penwtt pfin 9 23 23% 23 53%+ ft
“ JO 105 28% 29%. 27ft 2S*r+ ft
all* X PenzU pfl .33 39 40ft 41% 40% 41%+IVi
19% PecPDfp T.1B Wfr+%
36% 29% PaopGae 1J5 97 3Sft 36% 35% 36+1*
55% 49ft PepsiCo 1
” Perfect FUm » 12% 13% 12* nft+ %
195 SS?? 1 Ekn m »% 37% ai 37 — %
2?5 K , lnc ,JB 32 39% 43% 39% 40 + %
22ft 21% Pet Inc pfJO 1 21ft 21ft 21ft 21ft
44% X Petrnlone .90 ■' 17 Jl% 41ft 41% 4i%_ %
Si »■%. ,2 vS 17* 18%+ ft
1 - 60> 188 108 % lOSft 103% 104 +1%
55ft 45% Phelps D 2.10 249 53* 54% 52% 52'*— 1%
2* SSPJ 1 J-J 4 JS 3% U% «% %
98 92 PhilaEl pf 7 Z3D 94% 95 94% 95
« S EH!! 1 P”- 66 8l» « 65 52% 63%+ %
S S U PMJO 1140 60% 61 60 61 — %
** 51 Ph lEl pfLBO *100 51 Vi 51% 51% 51%
38% 31% Pfifffa Altar 1 397 32ft 34ft 32ft 34%+lft
55- S2V. PhllMar pf 4 Z140 5« - 54 5+ 54 + %
55% 50 PWIM pf3J0 zl20 S 55 S 55
25% 11% Philip Ind .16 375 .14 15 14 1A*+ ft
30% 19 Phil Ind pfl 2 20% 20% 20% 20%+%
28ft 20 PNN Pet 1J0 .2134 23% 24% 23% 24%+ ft
3L; ,J0f 17 17V4 17tt 17% 17%+%%
S? IIS 1J0 14 19Vb 19% 19% 19%+ %
JS EJ' W 7 4, T m 184 58ft 58ft 56% 56%-lft
16% 12% PlonNGdS JO 110 14% 14% 14% 14ft+ %
IS PI^Bw J8 135 33% 35ft 33ft M%+ ft
13 Pit Pu-g JO 20 14 M 13ft 14 + %
90% 06% PltlFtW pf 7 Z4D B6% 86% 86 86 — K%
98% 76% PUlStnn 1 JO X106 84 8«V 84 86 +Zft
53% 36ft Plan Resndi 210 40ft 44ft 40% 42ft+2%
83 74% 75ft 74% 75ft+1ft
630 9T 99ft 95% 97 + ft
6 16ft 16ft 16ft 1A%+ %
69% 67 Porter pfSJO *20 59% sT-i 69% 69%
21% 18ft PortG El 1 JO 20 20ft 20ft 20% 20%+ %
... 90 34ft 35% 24% 34%+ %
Potocn E) JO <96 12% 13% 12% 13 + %
Pot El pt2M 5 34ft 34ft 34ft 3<ft+ %
37% 28ft PPG Ind 1^48 £98 29 29ft 70 29%+ %
8 27ft 27ft 27J3R 27ft- ft
16 19 19% If 19 + %
85 74% Plough Inc J8
730% 88% Polaroid J2
17ft 15% Portae in
39% 29% PolkatchF 1
14ft 12
X 34
28% 24% Prvnrlnd JO
19ft 17% Premln pf JO
116% 105% ProctGa 2.60 275 100 112ft 107% 109 +1%
20% 15ft Prod Rich JS
- 24 16ft 16ft 16 16%
22ft <8% PubSCoi IJ6 181 20% 21% 20ft 21%+ ft
27% 24% PSvcEG 1J4 342 25% 27ft 25% 26%+]%
71% 66% PS EG pf5n *60 70 70 70 70 +1
fiJ 63 PSEG p(5J5 Z300 <5% 66% 65 65%- %
2?ft 19% PSEG pfl.40 9 19ft 30% 19ft 20 + %
41 3S% PilbSvIn 2J8 126 40 41 40 41 +1%
48% 47 PSInd pf3JD *40 47% 471* 47% 47%—%
14% 13% PS Ind pfl J8 *200 14% 14% 14% 14%+ ft
14% 13ft PSind pfl JM *100 14% 14% 14% 14%+ %
8% 6ft PuMklnd J5F 4 7% 7ft 7% 7ft+ %
23% 19 Pueb Sup JS 41 22% 22ft 22% 22ft+ %
13ft 16 PR Cem 1.10
33 27ft PubS PL 1 J 6
48 37% Pullman 2J0
71ft 62% Purolalr 1 JO
47% 42% Quek Oat .94
79 73 Quakoat pf3
3 6ft 20% Qua k5 toil JO
20ft 16ft Quasi or JO
1 16ft 16ft 16ft 16ft+ %
11 32% 32ft 32 32ft+ %
42 44% 46 44% 45*0+1%
5 65% 65% 65% 6SVa- %
74 44ft 45ft 44% 44%
2 78% 78% 71% 78%+ %
94 24ft Mft 24ft 24ft+ %
ID 17 17% 17 17%+ ft
R-S-T
30ft 26% Ralston P JO 15128*29 28% 29 + ft
42% 37 RalrtP pnn 2 40 40 40 48 + %
29% 20 Romeda J4 101 24% 26% 24% 25ft+l%
26% 1 TA Ranco Inc J2 21 18% 18ft 18% 1B%+ %
21ft 17% RapIdAm JS lift 17ft 18ft 17H 18 + •*
54ft 44ft Raybestos 3 2 46% 46% 46 46 — %
16% 10ft Raym Int JO tt 10% 11 10% 1Mb— %
33% 27 RVAYTH PF%.%% %% %— %— %—
34ft »!i RCA 7 587 30% JTft 3FX 31U+ ft
81 70% RCA cv pf 4 14 73% 74% 73 74%+1
- ■ - 10 12% 13% 12*6 13%+ %
1 12ft 12ft 12ft 12ft+ %
4 lift II lift lift
67 11% 18ft 18 18
16% 11% Reading Co
13% 10% Reading 1 pf
13% 9ft Reading 2 pf
27ft 17% RdgBattf 25
37 TO Redman JOs 167 23% 24U 23% 24%+l%
26% 20ft Reeve Br in
13% lift Reich Or JO
10ft 8% RellabStr JO
29ft 24% Rellan El JO
52 44% Rellan pfl JO
3 24ft 24ft 24ft 24ft— ft
34 11% 11% 11% 71U— %
1 9% 9% 9% 9'*+ %
32 27% 27% 2616 27 — %
4 49 50% 49 50% — 1%
27% 16ft Republic Cp 221 19% 19% 11% 19%— %
37% 33% RapU&SXTL %. %Z ft%% 36% 35% 36%
22% 17 Revco DS n 61 19% 30ft 19ft 20%+ ft
17 25 25ft 25 2Sft+ ft
2W 45% 66% 65 6»+ ft
3 79% 79% 79% 79%+2%
48 28% X X% 39 +%
35 +1
81%— 1
40 + ft
40%+ %
27 22% ReveraC 1JD
74ft 62% Revlon 1
X 76 Revlon pf '
38% 31% R*X Chn 1 JO
35% 3 ReynMet 1.10 156 34
03 71 ReyO pUJO
46ft 35% ReynTob 2J0
51ft 35% ReyTb pf2.)5
32ft 24% Rhalngald -20
21ft 16 Rlchntson JO
64ft 3 RlchMerr .90
22 19
15% 12% RiegelTxt JO
10ft 9ft Rtagm pf.BO
32% 23% .Rite Aid .18
31% a RManoF JO
7ft 5ft Roan Sol JOe 295
37ft 27% RohshCon JO
26 a RobrtnH 1.10
39ft 29ft RooInsAH JO 186 X
25ft 22ft RochGS IJb "
39% 32% Ro eh Tel in
31% 27% RoekMfg 1J0
156
34
35
34
4
82
82
S1U
164
38%
a
38%
13
40
40’*
40
64 3
U 31V* 30
5
16%
17
16%
48
58V*
60%
58 Vb
116
21V*
22
21V*
5
13
14
13
19
12V*
13V*
12V*
42
9%
9%
9%
25
24%
25%
24%
15
28
28
27%
295
6U
6%
6%
169
29'*
X
27%
4
21'*
21V*
21 U
186
X
XV*
X
80
25%
26%
25%
10
38%
38ft
38%
18
28%
29
28 ’*
47
74U
7K
■ 74%
14 +1%
9%+ Vm
6 %+ '«
X%+ %
— 1970 — Stacks and Sis. Net
Haiti. Lew. Dlv. fa s 100s. First. High Law LasL Ch.'ge
77 22% a
a 30% 32% 30ft
H 9*4 91* 9Vi
4 24ft 25 24ft
63 27% 28% 27%
51 16% 17% 16%
22%-r s .e
31ft +1%
9%+ %
2J + %
»J+ %
16%
37%+ %
10%+ %
T5ft+ 1*
44%+ ft
9 + %
15%-%
•CH+1%
27 + ft
79 + %
16»4+ ft
44ft+ ft
35%+V*
23ft+ft
17
22%+ ft
23ft— ft
8%
19U+ ft
14 —
17ft+ t*
. 52%+ %
18 22% 23% 22% 23%+ ft
- 20 %+ %
98 28V* 29 28ft
3 16% 16% 16%
T 44ft 44ft 46*
63 17% 17ft 17
100 21ft a% 21%
186 24 24 23%
6 8% 8% 8%
135 18ft 19% 18ft
26% 21ft Rohr Cp J8
40ft 28% Rollfas Inc .18
lift 8ft Roman JOb
mi 22% Roper CP 1
Xft 25% Refer Am JO
18% 14 RayCCala J4
40% 35 Royal Dot 2d Z78 37 37% 36ft
12% 9ft Royal Ind 255 10% 11% 10%
22% 15 RTeCorp SA 116 15 15ft 15
45ft 40 Rubrmd 1 J4 2 44ft 44ft 44ft
14* Oft RyeJcer Co 84 8ft Oft Rk
17% 12V* RUSS Togs JB 70 15% 15ft 15ft
46ft 37 Rydersys JO 152 42ft 43% 41ft
ZT* 22ft Safeway 1.10 170 26ft 57% 26%
30% 27ft St Jaa Lead 2
16ft 15% StJosLP 1 J4
44ft 39ft StLSdllF 2J0
36ft 79 StRMisP 1J0 116 34 35% 3*
24% 21 SanDGas 1J8 X 23% 24% aft
29% 15ft Sanders JO
9% Xft Sangamo JO
Xft 22% SaFalnd 1 JO
9% 8% SFe Ind pfJO
32% 18% SanFelnt JO ...
T7ft IK SarwweSd JO 9 14% 14% 14
18ft IK SavanhE 1.12 X71 17% 17ft 17ft
59 47% Schaefer Cp 254 5JU 54 52%
34% SDftSehttiley 1J0 18 22%
21ft 18 Schenl pnJO 263 Xft 20% X
63ft 54 Seherbw JO 236 X 60% X
7% 5 Schick
85 71% SchlitzBr 1 JO
B8ft 61% Schlmbr TJ0
14ft 6ft Sclent Resrc
22ft 11 ScIRas pt^lk .... ...
24ft TBft SCM Cp JQb *72 19% 19ft 19%
18 14ft SCQA Ind JD 27 15% 16ft 15ft
29% 21 V* ScotLadF J6 13
16% 13 ScottFetz JQ 51
22% 16% Scott Fore JQ X
X 31ft Scott Paper 1 178
45ft Sg2 ScqvTIIM 1J0
58V* SO SCOVUI pOJO
Uft 11% ScrewBf J5e
7% 6% Said DucVst
8% 6ft Scuddr pf.lSe
40ft 32ft SbCLInd t
16 8% SbdWorM
29% 73 S ra g rve JOb
45% 37 SaorIGD 1JQ
66% 62ft SearsR ina 421 47% £8 66ft
Xft lift Seafrain Lfa* IX 19ft 20% 19ft
X II 5EQCO JB
7% 4 Sail co Inc
31ft 21 5ervrnat JOb
46% 31% Shell on SJ0
37* X Shell Tr JOe
25 15 SheilerGl JO
21ft in shaifGi pnn
37 n% SheilGI pfljs
48ft 39% SherwnWm 2
5 6% 5% 6
12 74 74% 74
X89565 64ft 05
151 8% 8% 8%
14ft 15% 14ft
16ft
32
44%
23 23% 73
13V* 13% 13
16ft 17
32 S3
X 44% 45
17 55% 55ft 55%
14 12 12% t2
97 6ft 7 6ft
X 8 8% 8
in 145 3Sft X 35%
IV* SbdWorM Air 206 12 13 12
18 25% 27V6 25ft
65 40ft 43% 40*4
ITS 19ft 19ft 19
4% 4% 4%
22% 22ft 22%
41 42 41
33% 73% 33%
18 19 18
XXX
23% 23% 23V*
67 41% 41% 40
X 68 SherW pf4J0 *300 X X 681*
42% 29% S button JOb X 29ft 31% 29%
13 8 Siegel HI
X 16% Sierra Pec J2
I 1% 8% 8V6
24 18% 19% 18%
25% 20% Signs ICo in IX 21% 22ft 21%
XU 41ft Signal pf2X
43 37% Sfgrtoda 1.10
11% 7% Si mm Pracfa
X% 39% Slrnmn 1 JOa
90% xu SlmpPat JOb
2 43 43 43
21 40 40% 40
X 7% 7ft 7%
12 46% 47 4tU
56 75 76 75
85ft X SfrtgerCO 2J0 140 76ft 79% 76ft
110 97U Singer pfSJO
37% X Skelly 011 1
41% 33ft Ski I Carp JO
30% 20 Skynna .16
44ft 34 SmHtAO L40
41% 23U Smith Inti JO
55U 46ft Smith KF 2
23% 19 Srriucfcer JO
59%+2%
«%+ 1*
74%+l
66%+)%
8U+ ft
15U+ ft
19%+ %
16%+ %
73 +%
13V4+ %
n
XU+ vs
45 +1
55*6— >6
I2%+ ft
P.*+ %
8%+ %
X + %
12 %+ %
Xft+llA
42%+2
67 + %
Xl*+7
19%— U
4V*+ %
Xft
41%+ %
33%+ %
1B'k+ ’*
X + ft
X'*+ %
40%-n*
69 +1
31%+1%
8%
18%+ %
22 U+ %
43 — ft
40%+ ft
7%+ U
46ft
75ft+lft
78*4+2
X 99% 104ft 99% 103 +4%
18 33% 34 3%
4 34% 34% X>*
135 73 24% 23
7t 34>. i Xft XU
« 17 27% 27
541 Xft 53% 52%
5 Xft XU X
IK 12% So la Basic JO 119 12% 13% 12ft
31% 25 5oo Line le
21% IK SOS Cons J4
8 70 X 29%
10 16% l£v* 16*6
Xft 2ZU SCar EG 1J6 133 25ft MU 25ft
an X SouJrG JJ6
43% XV* Southdwn Inc
ft 28% Soutdn pf) ja
15% 13% SoeastPS 1 J8
8 24% X
3F*+ %
34%+l%
ZT4+ ft
X +lft
27**+ ft
53%+ **
X — V*
13%+1%
29%+ lb
WU— ft
26%+ *•
24% 24%+
32%+l
. .. _ .. X
19 13% 14ft 13% 14'*+ ft
23 31% 32% 31%
2 X 70
32ft 25% SkouealE IX lJ? 31% 33 31% 3T*+1%
28% 23% South Co m XI 27% 28U 27% 27%+ %
11 XU 32% 32U
77 46ft 48 46ft
5 11
113 51%
13U 14 13U
11 % 11
S3 51%
432 36% XV* 36%
35 18% 19% IK
32% X% SouInGE 1 JO
50% 39% Sou N Gas 1.40
36ft 31% Sou PAC IX 111 34U 25ft .34U
50% 43ft Souttirn Ry 3 in 48 49% 48
14U 13U Sou Ry pf 1 13 14 141* 14
26 18ft Sweat Alrmot 7 X X X
12'4 10% Sweat PS JO IX Uft 12 11%
20ft 12U Spartans JOe 99 12% 14U 12V*
21% 12ft SpartanA X
12 10U S par-ton .40
59ft 50% Sperry Hut
40% 33ft SperryR JSe
26% 17V* Sprague JO
17 15% Spring&MIII 1
22% 19% SquaraD JOa
67% 59% Squibb B IX
X ■''62 SquIbbB pf2
XU XU StaleyMf TX
54% 45% 5t Brand )X
55 51% StdBrd pf3X ZlQ 52% 52% 52%
XU 2812 StBrPelnt M 38 33% XV* 33'*
17 12U Std Inti J4b
13ft 10 Std Kollsman
53V* 42U StOIICal 2.80
48% 37% Stoll Ind 2J0
63% 47% 5tdOilNJ .90t 850 XU 57% XV*
85 59V6 SfdOtlOh 1.70 263 667* Ml* 46U
3 15U 15U 1SU
111 20% 21 X%
84 63% 64% 63ft
22 64’A 66 64V*
II 35U 351* 35%
77 Jlft 53 51ft
27 121* IK 12%
35 10 11U 10
617 44% 45% 44%
234 41% 42% 40%
32%+ %
47V.
35U+ 1*
49 +1%
14%+ I.
X + •■
12 + 1 .
1314+ %
14 +1%
11'*+ *4
5)%+ %
X +1%
19%+1U
IK
QV*+ U
64%+ 1%
66 + 1 %
35U
S3 +1%
52%
34 +%
13%+ ?.
SllU+1'4
45 + %
41 + U
57'4+lU
«%+7'*
10%
7Y* SI Packaging
56
9U
9%
9
9 - ft
34'*
27 St Pkg pflX
7
31
31
31
31 +1
14U
9% Sid Press JA
178
9%
9ft
9%
9?b+ %
11%
10 STPrudent X
76
10ft
10ft
10ft
10!*+ %
25%
21 V* StdPrud pt.10
1
74
24
24
34 — ft
44%
37% StanWks IX
3
42%
43
424b
43 + %
16%
n% Stanray X
<1
12%
13
12%
13!*+ %
— 1770 — Stocks and si*. _
High. LOW, DN. In % loss. FlraL High low ust. Ch'ge
XW.Flrat.HWi Low Last. Q?U
is? IS 3; IS B5f5
1S»* 14'* starreJT JO 2 17 1 .* W.* 171* 17%
34ft 29% StautfCh IX M alft aau 31% 3Ti+ %
35** Xft StautC pflX
12 9% JjfsrsftfBr S3
36\i 32 Supn* pfl Jo
7 £ SwvyFd J5e
IK IK Swar* JOa
2 3Zft 32ft 321* 32U+ U
„ 71 11 11% 11 11%+%
43ft 371* S ter I Drug .75 5» *% X'j »*• •+»
tt X SterlD pflX 1 74% 74V* »% 74VH-4
41ft 3711 SteveneJ 2J0 37 40 41 40 40%+ %
X 32 Stew war in 15 32% 3* 3Kh 34 + la
27% 20% Stoke VenC 1 ■ 25% 25% 25 »
14U 13V* StskaVC pf 1 JSOO 13% 13% 13ft 13%
X 21ft StaneW 1.90 X5 33U 34 =ft X + %
IK n% Sfonecont J6 5 1,88 Jff 8 -Iff 1 JSJSftt
30ft 19 SlarerBrd X 43 24ft 25ft 24% 25V* + %
47 3K StudeWorth 1 X293 44% 46 44% 4K+2
73V* n StuWor pfB5 x3 71 72 715 72 +214
35 29% StuW pfAl JO x27 32% XU 3K 3K*+2
I 7% 15 SuburbCo M X 1SU IK «U 1K+ %
33ft 2n*SKUB IX 44 27ft XU 27ft 28 + JS
14V. 13 SuCraO JO 2 M 14% 14 14U+ %
»•* 271* SunChem X 42 M'S 29 2ft* 29 + %
49% X Sun OH lb 204 4*!* 49 XI* 48’.*— %
38% 32V* SW Oil pfZJS IX 38 39% X Ml*+ U
27 XVe Sunbeam JO 48 24% 25ft 24ft 25U+11*
SOU 18ft Sundstmd JO 66 19 20% 19 X +1
48 45 Sundst PflX 3 45% 46% 45V, 46%+ %
14U SunahM J2b 32 16% 16% 16% 16U+ Va
75 72 Sub Vahi 1 .TO 14 24% X 24U .4JJ* t
144ft 113 SoperOil 1J0 24 134'* 1« TWVx 1»%+6%
M 241* SupmkGn JO X 25ft 27VA 27 +1J*
‘ -- 1 33% 33% 33% 33%+ IU
78 6U 6U 6% 6U
_ _ 73 14% 15 14 15 + %
3X3 XU Swift Co X 234 30% 31ft 30Vf 31%+ %
31% 25% Swing dne JO 1736 29% 33% W* 3SU+3%
*5 X SybronCI JO 77 37% 29V* 37% 37%+ %
75% 63 sybron pf2J0 7 63ft 64 63ft 64 +T
284* 17% Ssstran Dorn 33 18 18ft IB 18%+ U
Xft 22ft Taft Brd X 25 24% 24U 23ft 24 + %
20% 16% TaUMttN 1.10 255 17% nr* 17% Ifl%+1%
38U 1912 Talley Ind 111 19% XV* 1Mb 19%
24% 21% Tampa El J£ 72 23% 24U DVi 24 , _
661* 51% Tandy Corp 117 57ft 59% 57ft 59%+rii
23 17% TeppanCo JO 10 X 21% X 20Vr+ %
7ft 6% TechMet .tst X «% K 6% 6%—,%
55 39U Teehnlcon Cp XI 41 42 39% 40ft + 1 ft
741* 55 Tetaronbc 68 551* 56% 53% X’.*+l%
48 22% Tetedyn 1 J9t 459 2K 25% 23% MVS+l
156 99 Teledy pf3X 1 1B2V* 10 V* 102% 102V3+1V*
B3U 73 Teledyne pf 6 5 74 74 74 74
159'.* 90U Teiex Corp 1264 127% 132ft 126 127%+™
23 «% Tmpfaln J5 X35 21% 22% 21U 22%+lft
24% 21V* Tanneca m XI 2»0 21% «% 2irH- ft
90 79ft Temec P«X 46 81 83 80ft B2V*+1
31% 24% Texaco 1.60 981 DM X 26*6 27%+ %
27 22% TexETm 1.40 84 23% XU »% 26 + fb
37ft XI* TexCrnT 1.48 68 36 36ft 76 36%+ %
37% 30ft TexGs POX 4 35'* 35ft 3S% 3Sft+ ft
23ft 17U TocGSut J3 284 18% 1B% 16% 1B%+ %
34 ft 24% Texas Ind lb 34 73 27ft 27 77 — ft
134V* 111 Texailnst JO 175 120% 126ft IX 1X%+3U
55 45% TexOUGs .05 54 51% 53 51% 52ft +1%
18% 14 TexPLd 45e 4 17 17 14V* 16’*— U
59% S2U Tex Uta IX 773 59 41 59 60%+l%
XV* 20ft Textron .X 182 23% 24% 23% 24ft+1M
35% XU Textm pf2-D8 ID 31 32ft 31 32’.*+ %
0 K - - 9 241* 24% 23% 24%+ %
98 II
4 42
3 17
__ _ ■ 31
21% 17% Thrifty Dr X X II
30% 24V* Tl Corp IX 74 28% 29% 2K 29%+ %
43V* 27ft Time In 1 JOa 100 37% 38% 36** 37%+ V*
40H 33% TTmesMlr X 42 35 —
31% 281* Tin* RB IX XX
26V* 21% Textm pflX
14% 10% Thlokol X
47ft 40 ThomBet IX
21 U 16% Thom Ind JO
XU ThomiW JOe
lift 11 1116+ U
42Vz 42 421*+ %
17 16% 16%— 1*
21% 31 31%+ %
18 17% 17%+ 1*
351* 35
30% 30
3S%+ V*
30U+ U
27% 21V* Tkh Rlty X 67 XV* 24% 23'A 24 + ft
191* U Tobin Ptcg I
34 24 ToddShp IX
33 2Ti ToledEd 1 J2
5 MU 14ft 76 M
I 2K 25% SSU X'm— %
_ _ 43 r% 32ft 32% 32V*
27% 18% Toot Roll JCb 19 19ft 20% 19% 20% + %
671* 60 Trane Co X ID 66ft 64ft 66% 66%- %
36ft 30% TrensUn 1.16 94 33% 3SU 33ft 3^4+ ft
24»4 17 Trans W Abr 002 17% 19 17% 18U+ As
26% 241* TraWAIr pf 2 17 75 25% 24ft 24ft- U
I Jit 9% TranWF J9f 2)6 11% 13U 11% B +J»
Xft 19V. Transmr Xb 882 71% 23% 2)% 23%+ 1ft
1 04 VMI* Transa p(4X 7 160 173 1M 173 +16U
13 9 Transcon X 117 11% 121* 111* 12V*
24’* 14 Transctt Inv 225 151* IT’S 15V* WTfVk
7% 5 Transltrun 32 4'.* 4U 6 6%+ V*
38% 31% Travelers .80 388 34V* 35% 341* 35%+ U
48% 39 Travler* pf2 11 44»* 44% 44U 44%
33% a K Tricon) U3a 138 »ft »% ^
37*1 33% TrICon pt2X
IK I5»e Trienglnd X 10 IK IK 141* 141*—_%
X'.* 29% TRW Inc 1
272 33% 35% 33% 34ft +1
76 76 +1
84 84'*+2
17 17VS+ '*
17U 17%— 'a
u-v-w - \-Y-Z
84
72% TRW pUX
2
76
76
94
80 TRW pt4.4D
29
84
BM*
18
IK Tucsn GE J2
42
17
17ft
20%
15 Twn Cent
379
17V*
18
14%
10’* Tyler Corp
87
10ft
11%
28% X UAL Inc 1
39U 33ft UARCO 1.10
25V* X UGI Cp IX
200 XV* 25% 23% 23ft+ 1*
8 371* 37% 371* 37%+ '*
45 25 25% 35 25%+ V*
19ft 14U UMC Ind .72 X 14% 14% 14% 14%+ U
30V* XI* Unit Ltd .90g
33% 27ft UnllNV 1.J9g
1 26 X X X — %
2 xu au a«* xv*+ %
311a 26ft Un Camp 1 158 30% 31% 30% 311*+ U
3897 33>* Un Carbide 2 271 36ft 38% 36% 3814+1%
9V* r* Union Corp 58 1% Bft K B%+ %
19ft 16% Ua Elec IX 237 18% 19 18% 18%+ %
63% 58'* U n El pf4J0 z20 62 62 562
39% XV. UnOilCal IX 137 34% 3K 34
52ft 3Mi UOCBl pf2X 70 451* 4K 45
4 T*v 39ft Un Pac Cp 2 100 41% 42ft 41% 4K+1V*
41 X’t UnlotlPacIf 2 30 37'* 38% 371* X +11a
7ft 6ft UnPac pfX 7 7% 7% 7V* 71*- la
53’, 41 Unlonam IX 49 47 48ft 47 48g4-2
20ft 16% Uniroyal JO 212 II 19% II 181h+ %
IX 109ft Uniroyal pf 8 I960 102 104 102 102 + ft
461a 35ft Unishops X SO 41% 42U 41% 4lft+ ft
40% 39 UnttAIrc IX 328 25% 37 351b Xft+lft
62
34ft+ %
46%+l%
Maw Possibilities
for East-West Trade
East-West Trade is growing— recent important contracts bear witness.
Finance however remains the vital prerequisite. Finance
is the province of specialized foreign trade banks.
Under the sponsorship of
"4 :
HESSISCHE LANDESBANK- GIROZENTRALE
total assets of over 18,7 billion DM
Head office Frankfurt am Maim West-Germanys international
financial centre
the
Internationale Bank fur HuBcnhandd AO/Wien*
has been established in Vienna, focal point of East-W est Trade.
Other participants:
. BanqueWontts&Cxe^ P&ris
PhiladelpWa National Bank via
Philadelphia International Investment Corporation, Philadelphia
Bankkommanditgesellschaft Winter & Co., Wien
Genossenschaftliche Zentralbank AG, Wien
Dsterreichische Credit-Institat AG, Wien
. Bank fur Arbeit nndWirtschaft AG, Wien
Banks with more than 30 billion DM in combined assets and wide-
spread international contacts give you the backing you need:
New possibilities for East-West Trade also for you.
A
& Si fait f s.oi * »
» 45 Urt Fruit IX ^ 1
10% 7% Untt md X 8 S B Sk+ IB
7% 6 UrUInd pfX 4 6ft 6% *« w
29% 27 Unit MM ).» » ?!£ ^ ft
29% 27 unit MM IX « 1ZZ lpi+ ft
20% 14tt Un Nwclr M 54 IK 16 IK ijj ”
M 4% Unit Pk Min “ K 4% *%
35 WUM.Uto 18 tt aft »
XU S% USjKstlX « S* ^
st s* "StshSi ?» | as
34 »'* U5PCh PflX 09 Xft Wft Mft «
25SSSIIM
Sit SSK ilSSS St**
Xft »>.* USTobac J.W » »»* H
24ft 18ft Unit Util J® W ?4ft if'i
SS X WrWSk T« ttft ttv* XU
snu 73 UnvLaof IX 7 M% 2K MU BU **
30ft 75 unwan ZIJT VA.4- 1*
3K XI* UldvO Pd X » 35 J5h X% Sbim
99% 41% Unlvsty emp 723 44 47 41% 4K+ 1 J
99% 41% univsty onp •** « , « ^1+ %
ml ir 41 IS Si* 8 £h*
5k is uSbmo'x « m* ip in*
39% 32ft USLIFE X 1*7 35% X W* "*T .
Uo 1§ S" 5t » 5J-*
sift 44% utahcora x J? SJ; SfS fHS
3JT. 30% Utah FL 1.92 61 32ft »% »%
291k 22% Vartan Asm 465 24% S « Ji t JJ
48U 34ft VCA Corp X UB 3K *7* X% 3Ti+ *
43 26% Vaadtr 1J0 4| 37»i 40 . 37ft ?T*f v?
17V* MU V«ndo Co X I Uft 15’» l« •* + ft
32ft X VF Corp I 9 29ft 30 29ft 3g*+ 1?
31 x Viet Camp X in aw* TV* aw*
91* 5ft villager 71 K» JV* 5% * , v *
25 21 '4 VaElPw 1.12 522 24 75 X’i »'-‘+ »
101 97 VaEP p 17.72 iM 98 90 98 »
71 66 VOEB.P Pf 5 *310 60 68V* « « +J
65V* 6)1* V8EP pl4X *40 641* 441* 641* 64 '-*+1
57V* X VaEP pf4X *20 55 55 55 55 . „
17% I2U Vorrwdo 42 M*b IK Ml J
34% 271* V5I Corp X M 27% 2^- 27% flft+ %
24 161b Vulcan Mat 1 210 22% r* S2% X •+ %
15 13V* VWR Unit J2 8 14% l4li l4lb 14la
65 57 WabR Pf4X y» 60 1 * 60** 68V* 601a+1
56 53% Wachovia 1 6 53% 54U 531* 54U+ %
XU 23 Walgreen 1 « \ »» MU
DcrH \ JOa 2 471* 47ft 471* 4.- * %
50ft 45 WbUtrH
24% Waff Murry I
8U 5% Walworth Co
tO 22ft SI
II K 6
n + %
ill 6+1*
XU 16' WardFd 1.101 X ia% 17% 16% J7 + %
16% Wamaco JO
J Warn Co IX
a 17 17 i7 17
1 C.* 42V* ev* 42't+.l*
7K 63% WarUm 1.10 174 45% 66% 65% 64%+l
36*. 2>ft Warn Sw IX 5 36% Ml* Xft 35ft+ ft
2Pb 73 WasGaa 1.72 33 26% 21 Mlb 26%+ %
13% -2U WashSlI JO 3 I3lb I3U 131* 12ft- ft
X 19% Was wal 1 JO 72 TO Xft X Xft+ %
IBM 11% Aatk n John* 47 12ft 12'. I2U 12' rr ’*
IK 12'* Wayn Goa J£ 10 12ft 12ft 12ft 12ft
’ - “ 2 26'« 24U 25ft 2 Sft
9 9T. 10
5 IT. 16
30
_ 25% Way G PflX
12% r> Wean Unit
IK 14% Wean PfAl. 26
9% 9%
U?4 16 + Jh
Uft lift Weathrd .IX «i lift 11% IV* ilft-+ U
12ft 9ft W abb Del E 207 10% lift 108. II + %
XU 79 WelsMkl X 18 ttft 30'* 30'« tt'*
K
Wei Wit 111
5% 4 + U
54 SH 6 _
431* 38% WeiisFar i JO 92 40% 41% 40% 41%+1
28% ’61* WescoF IJ9* 345 X’* 25T. 23ft W + '*
2K 19% WestTra JOfl 1 X'.* 20'* 20' i 20’,*+ U
62% 5* WPP PI 4J0 *70 601* 60'* 60 60
24% 19% WslPtP Jie 47 21% »W 21%
IK 14ft Wstn Air Lin X 15ft 17 U'a irt+l
39ft 331* Wn Banc IX T6S 37% 39
24ft 21 WstnMd IX
23% 15% Westn Pac
48ft 36ft WnUnlon IX
19% 7* Wn Un PI4.60
66% 53% WestgEl IX 929 67
5: 53ft WestE p!3X 210 56
Xft 23 WMIVCD 1.05 99 23% 74
66 6j Westvo pUJO 253 67 67
31 ft 27U Weyberg IX
« Weverhsr X 410 46
371* 38'*+!
2 ax 1 X'.* X’ a X'*+ u
70 i7< • 17ft 17 17V*+ ft
79 47% 48 47'b 47' r+ %
1 B9’« 19ft BVi Xft+ ft
6T» 66V. 17 +lft
56 56 56 —1
2»b 23'*+ %
. „ 47 67 +3
5 ttft 3) ft 3Q-. 31'S+ ft
J 46 47% *5 ft 4S'«+1
«9>* Woyhr p 16.75 134 1051a 1M 105ft IX +2ft
21% 16% WheelPltl ostl 18 191 a 19ft 19ft 19%- V«
60 if WheelPIt pf6 rtX 66 to 66 65
601* a- Whirl Cp X 64 SV toft 89
IX
£9ft+
27% >7V WhlleCn Xb 07 19ft X 19ft 19ft+ ft
33% 33% VVhllCo pfB 3
Xft 3i WhIICn WC 3
2 U
A 33
Xft X
Xft Z3
33'.
'*+ ft
1
14% WhlleCrss J4
28
■SU
15U
15' 4
15* a+ ft
7U
25U -hlte Mot 2
99
75ft
271b
25ft
27%+1'a
19%
1' Whittaker
346
11%
Uft
ll'i
11'. b— la
41%
37i WtckasCorp 1
19
40ft
Xft
40 U
40' 4
IMS
B% WlebtSIr 25b
23
9’.*
91.
a ft
9
71 %X Will Ross
J6
6
60
61
U <1
29
X WlIHums Bro
97
24
25ft
23%
21 + lb
26%
19V* WmsBr pt-80
2
22
22
22
22
XV*
F -VinnDtx IX
21
29' a
29%
29ft
29'*
XU
30 Winn Dix a B
X
X
X
X
X -ft
23ft
19% WisEIPw IX
121
22U
33'b
22
22'n+ U
16ft
15% WlSPSvc 1.10
9
.6%
16ft
16%
16%
25
19% WHO. Ch S3
12
22
22%
21ft
22 ft ^ %
12ft
10% WDlv WW X
23
10ft
IFfl
10ft
11-.+ ft
Xft
17% WomelCP .42
X
18%
19'.
lift
lift 4 - ft
M%
17% Wood* Cr 4g
33
1BU
18%
ms
lff»4T %
3S h.
33% Wootwth IX
203
33%
XV*
XU
34»axlft
lift
8% Work- Alrwy
71
9
9
8ft
f + '4
5 102 103% IX 103U+1’*
4 12% Uft 12% 12'.*+ ft
60 831 92ft 951b 92% 93%+ 1
142 Xft Xft XV a 2S1.+ ft
21 30 23ft+ftft
94 37 Xft 37 X +1
1 XV* Xft Xft X'*+ 'a
39 V* 18% Zapata Non- 400 19'* Xft 19ft H’a— ft
421* 34ft Zavra Corp 34 35% 36ft 35% 36%+ 1ft
37% 29% ZenlthR 'Ji 247 34 35% 34 35ft+l'a
29% zum Ind X 715 31ft X 31 31'.«+ ft
1XU 100% Wrfaiev la
15 12V* Wurlllser X
1IK XV* Xcro, Cp.
37% 24L XTRA Inc
2) ft )7V .npstSDLX )7 20
44% 33% zale Corp M
36 261* Zale pi AX
»U X wiim Dixie B X X
X X - ft
Page 12
INTTRNATtOWAL HERALD TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1970
American Stock Exchange Trading
— W8 — Stocks and
High. Low. Dtv. in S
Sis. Net
lMs. First. High Low Last. O>'0*
— 1970 — Stocks and Sta. . Net
High. Low. Dtv. In S 1008. First. High Low Last. Ch go
m
4* AbftrdnH 1»
7
4%
6%
fi%
6
4*b Acme Hsmil
16
5%
5%
5%
5%
fi Aeme Prac
U
4
4%
4
12
5* Adams Russl
53
6*
7
Aft
T5ft
143*
13%
15%
171»
10%
10%
13
11%
am
6%
3%
16%
15%
2?’.
60
12
27
14%
0%
7%
12*
9
10%
27%
11%
15%
10%
27
22%
6%
Sft
16
5*
10 %
6%
Is
11
11%
9%
37%
21
16%
10
9%
as
27%
35%
7%
11
B
18%
IS 1 '*
9
19%
50%
17 J s
7ft
5ft
27%
3%
13
14%
5
34%
7
24ft
12%
23%
9% A erode* Inc
9 Aero Flow JO
13% Aero ter 5Da
13U Aeronca JDg
7ft AerosolT Jit
6% Aerovox Cp
7ft AIC Photo
8% Aiken lnd
31 Aileen Inc
27 10% 11% 10%
10% 10%
9% 9%
10
9ft
13 14% 14% 14
39 14 14% 14
5%
21%
14
30%
14%
46
11
19%
13%
20%
45%
7
34%
4%
2B<*
1B%
26
22ft
35%
7%
35ft
12 %
47%
27%
18%
6%
4>«
10%
31%
3% AIM CSS
2Va -friift Inti
KfaAirpaxEI 20
12ft Airwlek B J5
17% AlexMa .10e
56 AlaPw pM JO
8% Alaska Airi
15% Alaska Inter
9% Alba Wald J4
5% Aid on lnd
6 All Am Eng
10 Allegh Airi
6% Alien Airi wt
7% AllegCorp wt
21 U Allen eEl Jfif
7 Allied Art
10% Allied Conti
s% Allison Stl ja
20ft AtloyUnl JW
17ft AlrlghtAu J4
4 Alpha Indust
r% a tram lies jo
14 Alter Fds 50
50% Alcoa Df3J5
*% Alum Spec M
4% Amco Indust
8% Am era Inc
7% A AutVnd JO
10% Am B I Hr it JO
6% A BKSfra J6t
3218 AmBtdgM J4
19% A CoitUH 35e
14% Am FlnA '1.10
B% A MalzeA J3
8% A MalzeB J3
27 Am Med .12
19% Am Mot Inns
29% Am Petr J5g
5 Am Predson
8% A RltvTr J3e
5% AmSaf Equip
11% AmTech J5e
13% Ames DS -92f
7 AMK Wt
17ft AmpcoMt J0
23 Am rep Cora
15% Anderson J6
5*4 Andrea Ra .75
2% v I Andy Gard
23% Angelica .18
2% Anglo Lautro
10 Ansul CO J6
7% Anthony lnd
3% AO Indust
16% API Inst .109
4% Apollo Indust
7% Applied Data
8% Applied Dev
18% Anurtaln Cda
AquItnCda fn
3% Argus Inc
IP* ArizColoLd C
15% Ark Bast .30
25% ArkLGas 1 JO
11% Arrow Elect
40% Arundel Corp
8% Arwood JO
12% Asamera Oil
11 Vz ASPRO JOb
16% AssdBaby JO
37% AssdPrad .40
5 Astrex Inc
B *i Astrodaia
3% Atco Chem
19 Attilone lnd
16% All co Fin JOb
22% AtCLCo IJOa
11 All Richt wt
20% Atlas M 2.05a
2% AtlasCorp wt
24% Auger J5e
7% Auto BkSg
35% Auto Data Pr
13% Automat Rad
15% AVC Corp 30
5% Avco Corp wt
3ft Avian Inc
8 Avis lnd JDr
30% Avondl 1 JOb
8%
8%
8%
... 8% ...
34% 35% 34%
4% 3%
2%
10
Bft
8%
8%
8%
8%
7%
8%
8%
4
4
49
34
233
ll 13% 13% 13%
13 23% 24% 23%
1375 571*3 58 57%
m
9»i
2%
W.
86 9*4 10% 9*4
104 20% 22% 20%
92 11% 11%
6 5% St 5%
6%
6%
ir
tfli
8*4
6%
11% 10%
6% fftt
8%
8 22*4 22% 22%
16 7ft 7% 7%
9 13% 13% 13
3 8% 9
98 2lft 22 -
24 18 18% 18
5 4% 4% 4%
7% 7%
8%
21ft
7%
9%
4%
8%
19 - -
6 14% 14*6 14%
1533 52% 52% 51
5 9% 9%
4 4% 4*6
23 fl'i 9%
3 8 8 8
IV 11% 11% 11%
77 7% 7% 7%
3 34*6 34*i 34%
37 20% 21 30%
15 15% 16% 15%
30 10 10% 10
26 9% 10% 9%
85 28% 29% 28%
73 20 % 22 % 20 %
53 32% 33% 32%
6 5 5% 5
9% 9% 9
7% 7% 7%
11% 11% 8%
14% 14% 14%
7% 7*i 7%
. 17% 17% 17
89 25% 27% 25%
10 17% 17% 17%
B
93
98
1
269
2
7 6
495 5
6 6
... _ 5V» 4T,
12 23% 24% 23%
23 2*2 2% 2%
14 11*6 11*6 11%
24 77% 8% 7%
165 3% 4 3%
12 18% 19 18%
10 6% 6% 6%
45 8% 8% 8!i
87 11% 12% 11%
21 19% 19% 19%
25 19% 19% 19%
57 4*s 4 % 4%
5 18% 1BV»1Bo2
20 17?« 18% 17%
92 29% 29% 29
46 13% 14% 13%
5 44% 44% 44%
9 9% 9
309 13% 15 13%
3 11% 11*4 11%
1 18% 18% 18%
3 39*6 39*4 39%
5% 5%
9b4 8*1
_ _ 3% 3*4
52 20% 21% 201.6
1
4
*
3%
18 18 18
, 22% 22% 22%
127 14% 15*4 14%
61 26% 26% 25%
2% 2%
142
2*4
82 27% 29*4 27%
.. 10 10 % 10
176 39% 43% 39%
145 14% 15*8 14
5 16% 16*6 16%
137 5% 6bl
13 3% 3%
16 8V6 8*4
2 30 »
5%
3%
8%
30
«%+ %
514
.4%+ %
6*6+ ft
11 -%
10 -14
9%+ %
14%+ %
14%+%
8% — %
776-%
8*6+ %
816+ %
35%+lVb
4 + VX
2%
10 +ft
13%+ %
24 +*4
a
10% +fi
21% +%
n%— %
5%
614+ %
10%+ Vi
a *- %
9 +%
22%+ %
7% +%
13 — %
9 + ft
21%+ %
10=8+1
4%
7%+%
14*6+ %
5T -1%
9%
4%+ %
9%+1
8 — Mi
ir%+ %
7ft+ %
34 %— %
20%+ Vi
16%+ %
10%+ %
10%+ %
29%+ %
2111+1
33% +1%
5%+ %
9 — %
7*4 +%
8*4— 2*4
14%+ %
7*s+ %
17 —14
26*4+1%
17%+ *4
6 + %
4%
241-6+ %
2%
11*6+ %
B%+ *6
4 + %
19 + *6
61++ %
8%+ %
11 %+ ’«
1916— %
19%
4%-.%
181++ %
18% +%
»%+ %
14%+ %
44*6 — %
9Mr+ %
14% +»i
11*4+ %
18ft+ 14
39%— %
5ft+ %
914+ *6
3vb+ %
21 +1
18 — %
22%+ %
15 +1
25%— %
2%+ %
29 +1*6
10 — %
4l%+2%
14%+ %
16*6+ %
6 + %
3%+ %
8% +%
30 — %
B
Ifi
20%
71 h2
X%
21ft+ *
25ft
26%
25ft
26*+l*
X
26ft
76%
26ft
26%+ %
12
38
38ft
X
38*+!..
15
5%
5%
5%
5>b- %
12
AVz
A*
6%
6%
146 9 3-16 9 7-lfi
9%
fib— 1-16
3%
4
3%
4 +%
27ft
27%
22ft
J2%+ ft
56
6ft
7%
6%
7 1 A+ ft
39
714
S
7ft
8 + *
15 11% 11%
16 5% 6 14
11 10% 11
25% 12% BamrWrt JO
14 10% Bartel I Med
11 7% Barth 5 p J3
1316 714 Bartons Cdy
7 4% Baruch Fast
19% 10% Bede ind
9% 7% Itsell Electro
10% 8% Betaart Ret
28% 20 Benrus Carp
30 2214 BergBnm J4
49% 36% Berg B pfl.15
10% 7 Bertea Carp
9% 7% Beth Cp JOr
44% 235o Beverly Ert
27% 20% BlckfOrdi
10% 7% Bifl APPle ,
20% 18V4 Big Bear A 1
33% 28 Binney 1.30
514 Bishop lnd
4% Bloom) Bldg
6 Bluebird Inc
«r. 2*6 gbiuebira wt
28% 20% Bohack J0f
10% 6% Botany lnd
5% Bow mar Inst
26VS 20 BowneCo .16
26% 17% Bow Vail .10
18% 13% Brndfrd JOa
8% Branch In JO
39 13% 14 3% 13%+ % ,
13 12 13'A 11%
B 7% 7*6— V*
8% 7% 8%+ %
5% 4% 4% +%
7%
4*6
107 12% 13% 12ft 13V4+ %
73 n H
31 10% 10%
1 20 “
2D
78 23 V4 22% 22
1 36% 36% "
2 7% 7%
8 8%
7%
9%
20
7*
8
8 + %
9*+ M
20
22%+ ft
36%
?%+ %
814+ *6
163 24% 28% >4* 2«tr+2J4
250 21% % 21% 21*6— U
23' 7*6 8% 7% B%+ %
ii reft ia% 18% lavji —
7%
7%
8%
3%
1 27% 27% 27% 27*4— ft
55 5*4 6% 5% 51a
__ 4*s
15 6%
12 3
25 21
34 7%
5%
5%
6ft
3
4%
6ft
2ft
14
22 % 21
B% 7*6
5% 5%
5 + *
6 * 6 — %
2ft— %
21ft+ ft
8 + Vi
S%+ ft
36% 22% Brandywtn I
100 23% 24% 2 * %
123 - 20 21% 20 20%+ 14
7 14 14 13*4 13% , „„
4 8% 8*4 B% 8%+ ft
44 24% 27% 24% 26VS+2V4
9 8% eft 8% 8%-%
80 9ft 9Vs WB
15% 14% H%— %
11 10 10% 10 lW*
1 13 13 13 13 + %
13 12ft 13 12% *
7 5ft 5*4 5 ft 5ft
fi 11» 11*6 lift l»ft+ J*
1 24ft 24ft 24ft 2*ft- %
25 24% 24ft 24% 24ft+ ft
St iS BTO m2* 5 lS l» 1» W*
11
11*6
16%
15% 10
13 12
8*6 BranAIrw wt
9*6 BrnfAirA JSf _ -
19*6 BrascanLt la 140 15
Breeze
BrAmTr J4a
19ft 10% Bro Dart ind
6% 5 Brady Slg .16
1816 10 BrkPerk JOa
24ft 20% BrwnFA JOb
24% 20 BrwnFB job
9ft 5*4 BTB Carp
5 5ft 5ft 5*6 5% —ft
3 9% 914 »% 9ft
26 18ft 18ft 10% 18V* + ft
W 40 45 42% 43*4+ %
11 4 4ft 4 4 — ft
16% 9ft BUlir #w UUD 16 12ft 12ft J2 ,A 1 't^ 4
21%X ftftft Butte ©SOU 177 'ISte I6to 5% 16ft
11 9ft Byers JOa 4 9ft 10 9ft in -r m
7ft 5% Buehler Cp
19*6 9 Buell lnd ,10d
18*4 15ft Bundy Corp 1
46U 37ft Bums WJ JO
4*6 4 Burr JP -05a
16% 9ft Butlr Av JOb
576
12ft
10%
14%
23ft 10% Cablecom Gn
18% 15 Caktor J4f
33ft 23*6 Cdicomp
13ft 9 13-16 CampM Chib
13U 8*6 CempbM JO
6*a 4 I-T6 CdnExp G8cO
12*h B'A Cdn Gridoll
17 B% Cdn HomesM
lift 12% Cdn Hydro JO
29 Z3V6 Cdnlnt P 1 JO
15ft 11 Cdn javelin
51u 4 Cdn Marconi
37% 2716 Cdn Sup Oil
I Oft »7 Vb Canaveri JOf
6V6 5*6 Canooa Ind
53ft 40% Cap Ind .16e
50% 12 'm Career Acad
11% 7ft Carassa Inc
115% JO Camatn 1J0
6% 1376 Caro Pipe JZ
22% 1014 CastleAM .80
Bft 5ft Castle ton Ind
21 16% Cavltron Cp
5ft 314 CBK Aaron
14% 10ft Cellu Craft
48% 43 CenMe pf3J0
22% 17 CentSec 2.15e
31ft 23bl CemryE -60b
4% Century Geo
9% Con try Ind J4
7ft Cert Hied Cp
9%ChadMlll J5e
241-4 16% OiampHo .16
Pa 4 C ha ran Ind
1314 11% Chatt Gas J4
14ft 8ft Chelsea J4
31% 26% Cherry Burr
31% 29 ChiRhrt 1 JOa
23ft 14 Christian Oil
9ft 616 Cinerama
27*6 24 Circle K JO
56% 4214 ClrcurtF lJ9f
17% 12% Citizens F J2
10% 8ft OlyGsFla JO
616 4ft ClarkCbl J5g
24*6 15ft Clarkson Ind
8ft 6% Clarostat
10% 6V6 Clary Corp
13ft 10% Clopay J9t
33% 24ft CM I Corp
9ft 4*4 Coburn JO
26% 15% CoffMat .15e
15V6 9V6 CohuElec .15
12ft 10% Cola Drug J5
37 15ft Cole Natl J4
22ft 16ft Col era lnd .08
37*6 27ft Coleman JO
10% 7 Colon Snd JO
41 22 Combustn Eg
33 26% Com in co 1.40
916 614 Coml Allianc
22ft 16% ComIMtl JOb
16ft 7ft Comodor JUO
24ft 21*6 ComPSv 1^
16*a 12*6 Cnmpolnd
15% 10 CnmpDes JO
c
si 11 12*4 n na+ ft
20 18 IBft 17ft 18 + ft
189 26ft 2916 26ft 28 +1%
257 12ft 13ft 12ft 13%+ ft
4 IQ 10ft 10 10ft+ ft
113 4ft 4ft 4'4 4 9-16+W6
29 Bft 8% Bft 8%+ ft
113 9 1-16 9 15-16 9 1-16 9*6+ ft
17 12*6 13 12*6 12ft+ %
49 28*6 31 28% 30+1*6
92 lift 14% 1412 14*6+ ft
2D 4ft 4ft 4 4 „
57 28ft 29% 28*4 29%+ *6
22 7ft 7% 716 7*6+ %
26 5ft 5% 5% S' 4 ..
48 44 44*4 43% 44%+ ft
1200 1276 1216 12 12%— *6
6 11 11% 10a 71
5 110ft 110*4 110ft 110*a+l
2 14% 14% 14% 1416
2 21 21ft 21 21U+ %
144
9
6
7 ‘7% 6ft 716+ %
■7*6 17ft 17*6 17*4+ %
3*6
3%+ %
12 li% lift 10ft 107a— %
zin 44ft 45 44% 45
34 17% 18% 17% 1814+ 16
15 29% 30ft 29% 3Dft+1
4ft + *6
9%+ %
8%— ft
. _ 9ft
18ft 19%+1
4% 4%
11% 11% 11% 11%+ %
a% 9% an 9 + ft
4%
9%
8%
9ft
„ 4%
24 9ft
1 8%
1 9ft
111 18ft 20
4 4ft 416
7
39
4%
9ft
8%
9ft
2 28% 2Bft 28% 28ft+ %
1 X% 30% 30% 30%+ ft
168 16 17 16 16%+ ft
242 7 7% 7 7ft+ %
3 26% 26% 26% 26%— %
20 46% 49ft 46% 4916+3
19 14% 15% 14% 15ft+ *6
1 9% 9% 9% 9%
8 6 6 6 6 + %
76 17 19% 17 17*6+1%
5 6% 6% 6*6 6*6+ ft
19 6% 7 6*6 7 + V*
21 12ft 13ft 12ft 13*6+ %
3S 26% 28ft
106 5 5%
42 16% 17 ....
106 10*6 10*6 10 " 1«6+ ft"
12 lift 12 lift 12 + %
8 16% 16ft 16V6 16ft+ %
50 17ft 19ft 17ft 19ft+2%
13 32*6 33*6 32% 33%+lft
8 9 9% 9 9V1+ %
92 24V6 25 1 6 24ft 25 +1
1 26ft 26ft 26ft 26*4+ ft
17 7 7% 7 7ft+ %
21 21ft 21% 21ft 21ft+ %
208 10 10*6 9ft 10% +1*6
2 24% 24% 24ft 24U
13 16% 16% 16%
23 10 10*6 10 W%+ %
26ft 28%+Zft
4v« 5
16% 16*6- *6
— 1970 — Sleeks and
High. Low. Dlv. in S
sis. Net
1008. First. High LOW LMLOr'ge
7*6
12*6
IZft
1116
12*6
27ft
75ft
14%
14
24 T»
17
8*6
14*6
1476
3 5-16
9%
22ft
19ft
15%
3*6
14%
10ft
19ft
12
21*6
11%
15%
39%
7*6
X
10%
21ft
Bft
31ft
28*6
5 Com pu Dyne
6 Com put AspI
7 Gormwt Ed
6% Comput IrtStT
7% Commit inv
aft Computfst
50ft Comp Softw
8ft ConchenKo
8*« ConcrdF .Ifle
16ft Condec Corp
12ft Conduction
6 Connelly Con
9% connru .14r
8 Conroy Inc
2ft Con Cdn Far
7 Con Net Stl A
14% On Oil Gas
lift Can Refining
12ft ConsltDes .40
2% Cant Mater
10 Cook Elec JO
71-6 Cook Ind
17% CookPIV 1J0
9ft Coopr Jar JO
19 CorT BldC J6
7% casmodyne
8 Craig corp
25*6 Creole P 2J0
5 Crest men I
24% CramPtn 1 JO
6ft Crystal Oil
72% Cubic Corp
5% Curtis Maths
12 Cutler A J4
21 Cutter B J4
95
5*4
5%
5
7*
Bft
7*
7*4
B
7ft
6ft
7*.b
6*
7ft
8%
7*
2b
75%
24*
53ft
59
53ft ,
8ft
9%
8ft
7*
9%
9ft
17%
17ft
7ft
13
131b
13
7ft
Bft
7%
10ft
lift
TO*
8u
8ft
Bft
J'-it
li-15
2%
9ft
9ft
9’*
93
5
411 15%
2 14ft
1 15
48 2*6
15 10%
44 7
3 18%
3 9ft
14ft lift
15 15
2ft T\
ICft 10%
7ft 7
18% 18%
19%
9% 9ft
19% 19%
S
43 9%
a 27%
a 5%
7 27%
X 7%
93 14
6 6
a 23 %
jd a%
10 9%
28% 27ft
5*6 5
aft 27%
8 7Va
15% 14
6% 6
24*6 23%
22% »%
5%+ *6
■ + *6
8+46
7%+ U
8%+ ft
24*6-%
57ft+2%
914+ %
9*6+ ft
1716+ ft
13*6+ *6
8 + ft
10%+ *6
8%+ %
2%
9 '3 — %
16 + *6
14ft+ ft
15
2ft+ '6
10%
7 — ft
18%+ ft
9%+ ft
19%
8*6+ H
9Ta+ s 6
M%+1
514
»'i+l
7»i+ %
IS +lft
6 + %
24Ti+lft
aih+iu
D
976
n%
18ft
X'i
5%
15
35ft
25%
16%
23%
9%
24%
11%
16ft
64ft
Pi
27
Sift
45ft
7ft
19
124
13
6ft
1514
26
20ft
91%
15%
21%
10*6
14ft
34*6
4ft
lift
10*6
8ft Daitch 21a
48 Damon Corp
8 Damon Cr .40
14% Danieltn -06e
4 Daryl Indus
8% Data Cont
2 Bft Data Docum!
17% Da (a Prod Cp
12*6 Day Min .15g
17*6 Daylln J<
6*3 Davlin wt
18 Dearborn Cp
7ft DeJurAm JO
11 Del Labs
35% Deltona Corp
5% Deliown Fds
24 Depositors la
17’6 DeroRsch Dv
34ft Deseret Ph
6% Detecto S .25
14% Devon Appar
91ft Digital Equip
10*fc Dillard joe
5ft Diodes Inc
10ft DNersay JO
19ft Drxityn Corp
13 DMH Corp
68% Dome Patrol
12ft Domtar JO
Domtar fnJO
75ft Dorsey .10
M 6 DPA Inc
9 Driver Harr
25ft Drug Fair JO
M Duraloy CD
9% Dur Test J5b
7*6 DynalecJm
76
B%
8*
111
52
54%
3
FA
B%
5
lfift
15
12
fift
4%
13
9%
9%
5
TflJb
29%
196
13%
19%
16
13ft
lfift
75
30
TC-Ti
69
Bft
B*
19
X%
21ft
7
B%
8%
Bft
U’t
29 13*b
264 X%
14 13ft
43% 38%
„ 6% 6% 6%
2 24ft 2414 24ft
64 19ft 21% 19ft
7 X 35 X
3 6% 7% 6%
4 lift 15% 14ft
354 98ft 106% 98ft
53 lift 11%
56 5ft Sft 5)4
15 14% 14% 1<%
31 21 22% 21
54 14% 15% 14%
32 73% 747s 73%
Jt7 14% 15% 14%
11 14*4
51 17
6ft
lift
31%
3%
33
2
47
1
7
71
9%
B%
14% 14*i
17% 16*6
7% 6%
11% lift
32% 31%
3% 3%
m 9%
a% r.%
814- %
53ft+2%
8%— %
15+46
4*6+ %
9*6+ %
29%+ ft
19 +1
14 + %
20ft + %
Bft
20%
Bft— %
13ft— ft
40ft+lft
6%
24ft
21 + 1 %
35 — ft
7'-t+ %
15%+ %
HEft+Sft
11 * 6 + %
5%-F ft
T4%+ %
22 + 1 %
14*6+ %
74ft+l%
15%+ %
14%
16% — %
7%+ %
11 %+ *6
31%+ *•
3%+ Vs
9ft+ %
8%+ ft
E
12
27ft
17ft
13
27ft
fi*e
6%
13*6
27%
27ft
19ft
28ft
12
lift
19%
Bft
14%
10%
17%
27*6
2ft
10%
11
19%
16ft
8%
15ft
6%
59
7ft
12%
23%
12ft
X
5%
4ft
9%
21ft
34ft
Bft Eagle Cio J5
X E Scheib M
7ft Earth Rsercs
12ft Eason Oil Co
23*6 East Co 1J0
4% Eastn Frt W
5% Eazor Exp
8 Eckmar Cp
20% ECL IndT
17% E coftgic Sd
12U Edo Corp JO
lift Ehrench PhD
8% Eico Corp
6% Eicon Chem
17*6 Elect Hose la
5% Elect Assist
9% Electron Eng
6ft Elea Resrch
9*6 Electron JO
16% Electsp 1J5I
2% Elgin Nat wt
7 El Tronic*
5% Emenee Cp
16 Emery In JO
15 EmpiraFin a
5 Vi Entron Inc
lift Epko Sh JOa
4ft EquItyCp JOT
38 Vz Equit Fd .10r
S'ta Ernst EC JOt
9ft Era Indust
17ft Esgro Inc
8 Espey Mfg
16 Esq Rad El
4% Essex Cham
3% Ets-Hokin Cp
6% Evans Ar lnd
12% Executon J4
24% Extendcara
13% 13% 13%+ %
wto Slocks asd Sts. _ ■ Nat
High. Low. Dtv. In s lOSa. First. High Low Lit. Ch Be
— 1970— Stocks and Sh.
High. low. Dlv. . In t 100* PW.
Net
High Low Last. Chpa
— 1970 - Stocks aM
Hfgtu Low. pi*. Ri *
Sis. N*t
100s. First. High Low Last qyga
8
13
9%
716
14
8ft
4'.a Fabtcn JOb
7% Fabrics Natt
5%Fair«lob
Sft I Fafrmnt .123
9 Falcon Sbd
„ 6 F am Reed JO
33% 21% FanmrF J5o
6% Ah Fed ResrcM
11% 8% Federah Inc
18ft 14% FedMart JOb
13?* 10ft Fe’jwwt
29*6 21 Ftttray J2
72ft 9% Fibrebordwt
14*6 5T* FieW Plastic
18% Tl% Fltoaway JCd
16% 13 FlttrDyn .Olf
DIB
OTii 16*6 FInSanBa JO
16
T7ft
5%
3ft
18
X
13ft FmiGoU J4b
1407 Fst Coon Jo
As FirstNtt Real
2*6 Fit N Rl Wt
TPi FstSLSh .Ue
irj FbchPrt jar
15ft 14 Fbhman JOb
25 r t 1914 Fleet Ert .16
zns 19% Flight Safety
s% 4ft Fla Capital
13 Flowers In A
9 Fluke J J2T
13% Food rams JO
53% Ford Can 2
15*4 Forest Gt J5
13ft FoestLb J3
35% gfour Seasons
35' » FranklMt .10
8I1 FratiklR. .16*
16 FraiduNu JO
6*a FrenchP Can
17*2 Fresaillo .ICe
5 1 : Friend Frost
11 Frier lnd JS
6*, Frcr.lhjr Air
3% Front Air wt
15ft
17%
IBft
61%
25
24
67%
57
9*x
25ft
10
24
7ft
lift
Bft
<V
5 7%
a 7%
15 6%
7 5%
27 9
6 6 Vk.
5 21%
37 5%
19 Kk
28 14*4
7 10%
13 28ft
38 10%
19 Bft
31 12%
2 15*6
am 2ft
24 15%
T 15%
26 +U
31 2%
40 16ft
48 18ft
3 14
289 2274
JO Xft
5 4%
2 12*m
8 9%
TO 13%
Z8H 55ft
14 21%
IX 22%
366 42%
7% 7%
7ft 7%
6ft i
6 5%
10 9
5% 6%
22 21 %
6 5ft
9% 8%
7*6+ %
7ft+ %
fift+tt
6 + ft
10 +ft
«%+ Vi
22 + ft
5%
9ft+ ft
UTVh 14ft 14%
11% 10% 11 +ft
28% 27*6 28 - %
11% 10% HVi+ft
Wt 8
127* 12
. — *6
12ft+ %
15*6 U% lift— ft
22 19ft 2B6+ ft
15ft 15% 15%+ ft
1«* 15% Wi+ft
5%
2ft
4ft
3%
5%+ ft
2ft+ Vh
18 lfift 17'A+I
29*6 18% 19ft+lft
14 11 14 ,
237» 22ft 22?*+ *6
22ft Xft 22ft +2ft
4Vl 4% 4%+ V*
■0 0%
4% 3%
3%- 296
23% 19ft
Xft 15%
29% 16
X 29*6
24*6 19*6
14% 13%
16% 1%
32 ft 26ft
56 31%
X% 27
52ft 46ft
3676 X
14 lift
44ft 36ft
lift 10ft
40% 33ft
7 5*6
5ft 4ft
10ft 8
38ft 30%
62 44%
HiTtcnHot wt
HOfm indust
Oily Corp
Holoohn 1 JO
HomeOA JO
HorrmOB JO
Hormel l-«
Horn Hardrt
HosKib JOa
Host Enterpr
House Fabrc
Howe vis M
Hubben b J6
HudSMan A
Hudson Leas
Huffman JO
HuntdiA M
Husky OU JO
HuvckCB JO
Hreon Mfg
Kvdramat
Hydrametl
Vtygrad Food
HyndFdpf 4
8 SJft
14 3ft
46 2ft
8 22ft
TM 17%
10 17
1 29ft
4 20ft
5 U
A 12ft
19 30%
23 31%
6 XU
3
89 21%
6 12
14 39%
A 11
X 35*6
4 6ft
5 4%
19 8ft
36 33
3 A
54 Aft S3ft+lft
4 3ft 37#+ ft
3 2*6 3 + %
22% 22 22U+ ft
reft 1 7% i». „
1716 17 17 + ft
29ft 29ft VL
20*6 20*6 2Dft
14 .1* 14
12V* 12% «%-%
31ft. 30ft 31 + %
32*6 31% 32V6+ ft
SQVft 3Q * * 30lk— *4
47 46*6 46?6-*6
24*6 21 2K+2ft
12% ll% .lTft-ft
41 39% 40 + ft
lift 11
36% 3Sl*>
Ah 6ft
4ft A*
8% 8%
35<6 X
48% A
8% 5*6
4 3
20 '17ft
IBft UVS
7*6 4ft
SO 38ft
516 .3
7ft 5ft
11% 11
7TS *6
6% S
4ft 3U
2*6 2
7ft -6%
IBft 12
6% 4%
Lockwod KB
LodgeSh JUd
Loahman J2
Loews Th wt
LogbNa m
Long win jo
Lous SBwrry
LSB lad m
LTVAare. JO
1.7V Aaro wt
LTV Cftcrro*
LTV Ltoo Alt
LTV Lins wt
LTVLta pfJB
Lundy E lac
Lynch Carp
S 6%
9 3ft
5 18ft
179 15ft
72 5U
4 44%
4 3ft
2 5W.
72 11%
18 4
3 5ft
8 3ft
12 Z
+ 7
10 12*4
17 4ft
Cft CU
3ft 3'4
19- ttth
16ft 15ft
5*6 5U
44% 44ft
3*6 - 3ft
Sft 5ft
lift *1%
Sft 5%
4 3ft
2% - 2
7 7
12ft 13ft
5ft 4ft
S’-*— ft
» + ft
16 + *6
5U+.V6
44U
3H+ ft
Pi
n%+ ft
4ft+ ft
su+%
3ft+ft
lft+ ft
7 +ft
12%
5 +ft
im+ %
36
6*6+ ft
4*6+-ft
•8*6+ ft
35 +2
48%+I
M
13 12ft 13 —ft
9 H 9% 9*6+ *6
13ft 13% Wft+ %
55ft 55 1 * 55V*— Vi
125 37
5 9
36 16ft
58 7ft
ZIV2
616
lift
7
3ft
22% 21V: 22V4+ *6
23% 2216 22ft+ ?■
4Ms 4211: 44%+ 2%
37ft 37 37%+T
8% 9%+ %
16ft lFA+%
7U 7 7-15+W6
21*6 21% 21%— ft
6ft 6ft «i+ ft
lift lift llft+ ft
7 6U 6?«+ %
A 3ft
9%
17ft
7ft
4 + ft
16%
13ft
11%
13»*
w*
10 Gabriel J9f
9% Garun Inc JS
Sft Garland J3
y. 3 GateSpGd JO
H GayfeJNat JO
34ft 27% GCA Carp
15*4 15+ Gea-hart J4
5 ft 4% Gen Alloys
IPs 15V* Gen Battery
8*« 7 Gen Build
31% G Ctiema J2
141, G Employ J4
6% Gen Interior
... 6 Gen Piywood
SSri 36% Genge lnd
7*k 4% Gen bco Tech
3g--o 25 s 4 GerberSc Ins
6ft 3*1 GN Indust
24 T , 21 Giant Fds 30
9 11-16 7*6 Giant Yd M
38%
Sft
lift
9ft
J
35
88
2
13%
10ft
13*4
, 7ft GilbrtCo .10b
31 1 '* 21ft Gilbert Flex!
23% 30 GL lnd -91f
9ft Gladding
7 ft GlasracK Prt
._ . TOftGlenGer JOa
15ft 14 GlenDisB JO
5*6 3ft G kick in Wm
8ft GoktbteSt J6
3>.t GoMleld
12% Good way
8% Gomslnc JO
5ft Gould wt
4ft Granger As
lift GranMst .76f
11% Grass Val Gr
3*6 Gt Am lnd
7% Gray Mts
4*6 Gt Bant Pat
10 GtLak Chem
5% GtLak Re J8f
16% Grew man
11*6 Greer Hyd lg
11% Grevh C JOB
26% GrocStr 1J0
8% Grow Ch JS)
S“i Groan In J5t
3*4 GSC Enterpr
4% GT! Corp
42ft 29 Guardian lnd
29ft 2516 GoarMI IJOe
17ft 14g5 Guard Ch JOb
25% 16ft Guerdon lnd
15ft Gulf Can JO
4% Gulf St Land
4ft Gulf Wind wt
10
5ft
16ft
9ft
9U
7ft
22U
20%
4ft
lift
6%
15ft
6ft
20ft
15ft
14*.*
Xft
10ft
71,
5
6ft
24 10*6
18 10
9 8%
5 12%
13 11%
X 27%
17 T2U
4%
16ft
7%
_ 34
22 lift
45 9%
17 7Va
153 371:
18 4%
40 25ft
A 4ft
74 22%
A 8 13-16
4 r*
X 21*4
6 28*4
37 97*
12 7*6
10 10ft
3 14ft
3 3ft
2 Bft
9B 4
8 13%
12 9
99 6%
9 *>i
4] lfift
24 13
46 3ft
13 9ft
53 4%
49 12
2 5ft
200 19%
2 15 %
21 11%
Z25 2716
14 9ft
23 5%
42 3ft
33
9
19ft
5%
6%
5ft
. 31ft
94 25%
1 15%
98 17
X 16%
4ft
5%
TO* 18% ghb amer
8
121 _
434 23ft
KM 10%
10% 9ft
Bft 8%
12% 12%
11% 11%
29* 27%
12% 12ft
5 4ft
lfift lift
Bft 7%
34 33ft
14ft 13ft
9% 9%
8 7%
44ft 3716
5 4%
25% 24%
4U 3ft
23 22Tz
9'6 8 11-16
71 1 7*
23ft 21ft
21 20ft
9ft 9%
8 7ft
10ft 10%
Wh MU
4ft 3ft
8ft 8ft
4ft 3ft
lift 13%
9% 9
fift fift
5ft 4ft
18 lfift
lift 13
3ft 3ft
10w3 9%
4ft 4%
13ft 12
5?s 5%
X 19%
15% 15%
12ft 11%
27ft Z7U
9% 9ft
5% 5%
A SXb
5ft 5V6
XV6 21%
26 25%
15% 15%
17% 16%
Iff* 16
5 4T«
5ft 5V6
25% 23ft
10%+ %
10U+ %
8Th+ %
12%+ %
11%
»%+!%
12%+ %
5 +ft
lfift+ ft
Bft+ %
33%+ %
14ft+ %
9%+ %
7*a+ ft
40 +2%
4*4+ ft
24ft— %
4%+ %
22%+ %
ST*— *
7%— Vh
23ft +2
21
9ft+ %
7ft+ %
10%+ ft
14%+ %
4ft+ %
8ft+%V.
3* — *
14 +%
9*+ %
ffft+ ft
5%+ %
17%+ %
14*6+2
3%+%
10%+ %
4%+ %
12%+ %
1«4+ %
15%-ft
12V6+1
Z7U+ %
9%+ ft
5%
4 +%
5*+ %
Xft+1%
25%+ ft
1S%+ ft
V7V4+ %
Ifi —ft
4%+ ft
5%+ %
24%+ %
7TA
21*
mb
11
7
50%
25-16
lift
A
15ft
8%
11%
17%
55
14%
fift
37%
9%
izn
15ft
27%
36%
9%
22%
fift
12ft
9ft
7
25%
5%
Va
18 Waal Toy ■
lfift 1HC Inc
8 IMC Magnet
8% ImocoG l.TBf
6% impChm JIB
15% imp OK JW
2 lmTGrP J3 b
7*6 Indian Hd wt
2% lnd El Hard
lift loflghtF J»
PA inland Credit
8% ImtTpn Corp
9% HJrtrSys ,J5f
42% int Ch Nodr
9 Int Controls
3% InMcontA wt
19% mtProton JO
7% IntStrtch J7a
10 interpboTD
10 Interstate Un
10ft Irrtersystm
X mvDivA i.n
7% InvDtv B JS
15% InvFund JOb
4ft Inv Roy .Ma
8ft Iroquois Ind
6% Irvn Ind JAf
5% ISC Ind
12% ITEL COTP
3 IT! Corp
3-32 IT1 Corp rt
Ifi 20 aori 20 20 %+ %
7 18% 1A» IBft lift- Vh
17 7% Bft 7% J . •
10 9% tin Kh 9%+ %
1 4S.lfi45-16fi5>16 6 5;16
109 19ft 19% reft WVVf- %
2 2Vk
7 7%
4 3
2ft
8%
3*
2
-7%
3
2
8 +ft
3
33 12% 13ft 12%' IPH*
B 7ft 7% 7% 7Va+ ft
9 9%
9ft 10%
9 " 9 + ft
9*6 10*+ ft
140 47V7 50ft 47Vz iS^a+iSVa
£ F% IBft m IM+Ita
34 3% 4U 3*i 4U+
70 23% 25 23ft 24 +1
7* » % 8ft+%
1 lift 17ft Tift lift, _
40 10V6 11% «% 1M6+ %
76 14 16% M
27 34ft 35% 33% 35+ %
8% 8ft 8% 8ft+ %
U% 18% 16% 18U+2U
4% 4Th 4% 4 *t- %
8ft 8%
7% 7%
7 AU
17% 14
4ft 3ft MacoM tad
8% _SV6 Macrod Cturt
6% WMWMM,.
17% MU Ml PDSV1.16
.7*6 5*4 Mattery Ran
22U 17 MamMart M
53% 18*4 Maomt Data
14% 10 MangatSt JO
24% 19 Manoorian .
IBft 16 MansTTR JO
13% T2lb Marindq nJO
9Vs 7 Martens JO
X 38% MartoyCd -A
67% 33*4 Marshall Ind
IS** Bft MatftJSon JO
37% lift MaoIBrH JO
17ft 14ft Maulitnd JO
7 McCrary wt
7ft McCrarwt n
28ft McCUli OH a
1M UftMCDonrti JO
19ft 15ft Mean* FW 1
5 MedcoJwty A
Wh 131^1 MEM CO J2
Ub'i 10 ft Menasco J3f
24% ai% Merta N .10a
3 15-16 2*4 Merrill l>l
3ft .9*6
5ft. 5ft
5ft ■ 5ft
3ft 3ft
fift 5ft— ft
Mh 5ft+ %
fl 17 17ft 16% l«h- %
87 5% 6% S?h +%+%
9%
10%
34
24 20ft 20ft .mb' 'Mia .
57 19*6 20% W Mft+1%
4. IOVi 10*4 VA 10ft+ ft
45 19% Pft 195b Slft+1%
11 16% lflb 16% l«b+ %
16 lift 1» 1|» Wi- %
- 9 7 7*« 7 7%
U JO 43% 42 4I%+1 ■
382 44 39% Aft+llB.
m ir wa re reu+ ft
22 Wft 18 t 14% Wft+J
If 16% lfift 15U 15*4-1
26 8% 9% »% *
56 9% 9% 9% 9%+tt
115 34% 35Vh. 34ft- Mft 1
3f 17U 17ft 17% lBfc+%
* :17ft 18 17*4 1 r+>
5*4 5% Stt-it
3 5%
» MU 14% 14U
97 -11% refa 11% 12%+ %
,a a a n .an —«
u
36
A
7
7
30
8ft
7U
6U
383 14
6 3%
«%+.»
7%
656+ %
15% +2
11*4
9%
fift
3%
X
54213-16 2 15*16
9% MichChm .jo J re« iow TOW WU+fc
.6I1 . wt
6 fift
3% 3%
66 3-32
aft 3% aft-l- %
% 3-32 3-32 — 1-32
fiVk Mich Gaul
5% Mich Sug .»
3U Mich Sg pf J4
„ 20ft Microwave .
17% lift Midi Co JO
14*4 lift MldlMtg JSe
MldwRu .TOP
1ST, 10% MMwFbil J2
fift fift-ft
6 fiU+ft
3U TO
J-K
84% 58 “ j'rnl too Elect,
' I MilooEteC Wl
fift 5%
19% 15ft
33ft 22
13% 9%
24% 18%
9% 7
4% 3U
10% TVs
15% 9
21% lfift
8% 6
25% 17%
7ft fift
22% 18%
61 58
21ft lift
mi 16ft
lift T0%
6% 4ft
26H 20ft
2501 20ft
26% 19ft
- 8% 6'A
12 % 8 *
9ft 6%
4% 3V4
12% 8
lift 8Ta
35* 26
9% fift
23% 17ft
lift 5ft
36% 27%
22% 16%
19% 13
31% 24%
26% 19U
Jactvn .10e
Jamaswv .Xf
Jeannette Gl
Jeff Lk Pet
Jeffcrsn Sirs
Jervis J3t
Jatronc lnd
Johns Bora St
Jupiter Cp
leaser In J8t
Kalvex J5t
Kane MiUer
Kane Mil wt
KantbPL JO
KnGE pf4JD
Katz Drug JO
Kaof Brd wt
Kavanau JO
Kay Jwty
Kenton Cp -32
Ketctmm JO
Kewano JOb
Key Co
Keyst Ind JO
Kltembe J5B
Kin Ark Corp
King Radio
Kingston! JB
Kings Laf 1J4
KlnnypfC JS
Kirby lnd JS
Ktoer vu
Klataert
KNcMc JO
KnottHotl JO
Kollmogn JO
Kysorin JOa
4 5% 5% 5%
16 lfift 17% 16%
27 23ft 24% 23ft
12 lift 11% H%
3 18% 18% 18%
4 7% 7% 7%
10 3% 3% 3%X
13 8% B* Mb
105 12 13% 12
141 » 20% 19%
36 7 7W F«
X IB* 1M7 18%
45 7 7U We
21 19ft 19ft 19%
2B0 H% 58% » ,
68 15% 1614 15%
94 17% 18* 17%
11 10% lift 10 %
1 4ft 4ft 4%
16 XU 21% 2DU
113 21% 21% 21
17 25 25% 24*i
44 6% 7%
3 9Tb 9U
8 7% 7ft
X 3% 3%
525 8% 8%
22 9Va 9%
2 27 27
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34 6 7% 6
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1 16% 16% 16%
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14 26% 26% 26%
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24%+lVb
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1B%
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X
fi^V- Vb
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21 U— ft
25*4+1%
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9U+ %
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3%+ %
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19%+1
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1314 10% MllirWotll JS
16% MIDOnyx J4f
.... 4ft Milo Elac
<3ft XU Milton Roy
X% 27 Mine At 1J»
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7%fiW6 Motybd Can
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lift 9% MortonSh 32
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42 5* Aft S« fi + %
29 29 .30% X 29%+ Hi
36 26ft 26% »% 26V! — ft
11 27% 27% 27% 27118 1
74 8% 8% 8% B%+ %
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83 Wft lift IBft 11%+ %
17 5ft A 5ft A +14
7 Aft fi* AVe 6%+1-lfi
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Me
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HamtCos JO
Hampsh Des
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9ft 10 + ft
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Id Lafay Radio
9% Latoton
2ft Lake Shore
29ft LaMaur -36
3ft Langley a
4 La Point JOa
fi + ft
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17% 17ft+ %
12 — %
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8
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10% 10%+ %
29ft 29ft— %
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7* Leas Data wt
19ft Lae Ent JOe
8* LaeNatt 3.121
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19% Leisure Tech
48% Lenox Inc 1
29% LeroarSt JOe
Ifi LernerStr wt
15Tb LeslIeFa JOb
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49% M% Lavttz Funi
1Z% 9% Lib Fab JOt
13% 8% Liberty Leas
is 10 Lily Lynn A
8* 5ft LlngTVgt wt
11%
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X
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54
36
22 %
20 %
TO*
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21 9 9Tb 9
13 30* 3?ft 30* 31U+ %
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71 JU 7ft 7% 7ft— %
305 7% 8% 7%
4 19% X
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. U
17 18ft 11% 18%+ %
73? ^ 1SS
' 2 50* 51 Si* 51 + ft
81 X* 35 33ft 34U+1
106 X% 21% 20% 21 + ft
X 19 TO* TO 17*4- ^
83 FA 9ft 8% 9 + V,
112 42% 44% 43* 43ft+l'
I# 10 10% TO . 10 + ft.
14 9% 18ft 9% Wttf %
7 10ft 18% 10% W%t*
220 6 7 6 : - 4%+ %
6% Napco lnd fi
5* Nerda Micro '.17
6% Nat Alfalfa 17
4% Nat Balias H .19
16 N Caskt .158-3700
7ft Nat Gan wt J9
4* Nat Gen wt n
7 Nat Hlth Ent
2* Nat lnd wt
4* Nat Radio Co
14* N Realty JO
13ft Nat Systems
4% NBO Ind
10ft Needham JO
14% Netsner JO
6% Netty Do JOa
3% NasllaLa JDh
14% Newcor JO - .
12 N Eng Nodr
9% N HampB .43
2% Nawldria Mn
17% 12% New Max&Ar
9ft 7% New Park Mo
69 » N Proc IJSe
42% 28% NYTImes^Oa
11% SU NlasFrS J17p
16 8 NAAS Indust
17% 13ft Norf So RY
32% 19% Nortak Inc
27% XU No AMtg .42e
7% 5% Nor Am Rmr
30* 25Tb NoAmSug JO
Bft 5ft Nor Cdn Oils
8% 5% Noeast. AlrRri -
60% 54%'NlnPS pf4J5 z!60- 57ft
fift 3% Nowst Ind Wt 176 fi
9Vb
10
9%
5%
23%
12%
6%
15%
4
6%
19
34%
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13%
16%
9
16
16
IKa
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3%
220 15
< fift
26. 10
13 14*
2 7ft
93 ' file
7 15%
8 12%
4 10%
39 3
5 15ft
- 30 7*
61 55
2 31 *
11 5%
50 Bft
3 15%
309320ft
35 25*
11 7
1 25%
7363-16
78 STb
9 .8%
4% 4%
17% 17%
9 8%
5ft 4%
9* Kb
3 • »
4% -fift
UftrJ
irn re
-fift-4*
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-ar
«¥r
TM. 12%
15 T
16% .15*
«% 7*
ST . 55
M - 3W»
5ft 5%
Vft 1
15ft lFb
22% 20ft
26 25%
7% 7
25 Vb 25%
fi* 63-16
5% 5%
57ft S&ft
d% 5*
fi%+ ft
5*+%
■9 ...
4%+ Vb
17%-%
: 9.+*
5 + ft
:9%+ %
J +U
A
’.15*+%
.17 ■+VA
+4
im+ft
MW+ u
7%+ %
4ft+ %
14%+lft
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Wft
• 3
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fi*+5-1fi
5U+ ft
56ft— 1
' 5%-%
rCwitamed ra next po<eJ
pus
profSI
iiiiiiul
GRAMCO’s
A share in the expanding economy of Spain
Spain is today enjoying a rate of economic
growth unequalled in the Western world.
Industries, such as steel, shipbuilding,
automobiles, petro-chemicals and heavy
construction are booming. Tourism, with as
many as 20 million visitors anticipated in 1970,
brings a healthy flow of foreign currency to
boost Spain’s balance of payments. Agriculture,
long one of the mainstays of Spain s commerce,
is being efficiently reorganized and achieving
new export records.
The best evidence of Spain's economic
miracle has been the phenomenal rise in the
share prices on the Spanish stock market.
Between 1966 and 1969 the index of the Madrid
stock exchange rose by an astonishing 1 1 5%.
When the time came for GRAMCO* to
build on its past success and establish its first
national fund, Spain was the obvious choice. Its.
economic prosperity and almost unlimited
potential assures the investor of a highly
favorable investment climate. With new
investment opportunities and our proven
financial management skills, we could offer the
international investor a share in the expanding
economy of Spain.
Our new fund, GRAMCO IBERIA,, invests
r00% in Spanish securities.
We are proud to announce that since the
start of Gramco Iberia’s operations. 2 1 days ago,
our fund has received i nvestments of more than
$20 million!
It is dear that the international investor
shares our belief in the exciting future of Spain,
■aj&GRAMCO is the exclusive distributor of
US IF, Real Estate— the world's largest
mutual fund, investing in prime, income-
producing U;S. real estate. The Fund
currently owns areal estate portfolio of
200 -properties. Worth over $720 million.
If you would like more information about GRAMCO, contact
your nearest Gramco Bnandal counselor or fill oiiUhtaoponbelcM.-
• ^TTXr-r\ (U-IC) united, MIllbonkTaw, •
I OKAMLU Millbank. London. S.W./.&igfond. ;
Z Please serjd me (ftformotfon on Gramco Jberto. .J
• Name: ■ ~ — + * r
• Telephone:
J Address ':
• Qty*
1 Country :■
— • , .
’.■* -
ir. i
«■
r,
;f.
:•
vru ,
■mv.
'di
A—' I ~Z]
INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1970
Page 13
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Tokyo Exchange
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£ tffe PldCwWC I nil 32 43ft 44 43ft 44ft+2ft
fit SSwrPlE 14 19ft 19ft 19 M —ft
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ffit ll- piunw Atwod
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Mft »» P«&5*r
36 16ft 17>4 lift
1 lift lift Uft lift- %
40 M) 111% m ■ 11 +lft
45 13 13ft 12ft 13 + ft
S 5ft 5ft Sft 5ft+ft
79 14Vi lift Uft 16 +lft
I 10ft lift 10ft •■1H%+ ft
0 148* IS 14ft 15
7 4B 48ft 48 48ft+ft
7 12ft 1216 13ft l>ft+ ft
1 lift lift lift }lft+K
12 in* 18 17ft 18 + ft
_ lm _ n 9 Vi 9ft 9V6 9 ft— ft
P^rTj^ 243 T5ft lift TO* Uft+ft
tiSlsi’KpH 5
II 18ft 18ft lift Uft+ J*
13 10ft 10ft 10ft 10ft+ ft
w* . 9 Prairie Oil
Ml -Uft Pratt Lamb I
a - 4*to. PrwrtHaii -is
1IH lift PncRItfl JO
yi -fft Pimlon Jto
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i Wow GM 44
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uft lift Pyft K> N -®
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m rSSdAmVt 143 6* 6ft 4ft 6ft+ft
■B-; imga way . 1 « t ? 3 a #4:8
1 6ft ift 6ft ift- ft
74 10ft 19ft lift 19ft+ l*
41 10 10ft Oft 9ft+ ft
IS 7ft 7ft 7ft 7ft— ft
Uft 9ft RaymEjig JO
'7ft 4 Rwdlns Ina
jOft'UftXMllRW IJOa
Im 9ft RanyBjm
, 7H R**Hy B -«t
ifa M 36 13ft tf|* 1»
& redm
_ CorpT 21 4* 4V* 4ft 4VH- ft
",5ft Tift SatWM 0^.^> . gj * lu,±8
ffi.4 :&£■&£■ 58 >& a ^+5
sa ,5S£?!L 1 88 !1» !» 88+ iS
Wh J7ft RorchCtt^S .W 40 41ft 40
lift 6ft RmwOG .14* «ft *ft Jft J*+ *
-* kSSS&x i >: s 4» i! Ajr «
st jsssrari « § a* ns
«- 1W BMC Noraco *16 15ft lift 15ft 16ft+ ft
SS lift RH IVftd Sww iM 11% im !SJ •!!«££ ft
11 6ft RIC nit Ind 209 lift Hft 11% ll%+ %
Uft , 7ft Wdiford Ind 18 : 7ft I 7ft 1 + %
- 25ft RtcMon InN M 26 WJ 26
21 5ft 5ft 5ft 5ft+ ft
- 4 4* M4 6ft 6ft+ J%
rra in nwim «w £ JJ . 7% 7ft 7ft Jft+
23ft 17ft-Rockowir JO 105 lift 19ft lift 19 + Ji
m » -SSSnuir i 5% 32ft a« ?»+.!-*
TSl 32
on
15 Kk RBctr
4 jft RNcar Mxn pf
Sft 4ft RHI Fin B J4
Ift Sft RoMntKh
9ft 7ft Roblin ind A
45 - 27ft RoTlln* Inti 251
33ft 31% S3ft+2ft
— 1978 — Stocks and
Hlflh. Low. Wy. In 8
Sl«i Nat
loos. Pint- HI01 u m uat. or pa
— 1970 — stocks and ■
High. Low. Dtv. . ft C
5 ft. Nat
loos. Pint. High Law Last Ch'go
3 % St -14 Roll Roy J 6 g
48 % 42 ft ROBMRaC .80
111 % Rown Dr I -Mb
Sft Rowland Pd
2 ft Royal Arncr
7 ft RoyBuSn J 5 e
Ift Rum Iftdwt
3 ft RutMks Inc
61 % RittMlIA -048
25 V*RU 6 TCratf JO
2 SV% RustCrtft JO
3 ft Rysrsn Hay
26ft
w
9ft
12ft
Sft
7ft
3216
32ft
5
111 2 Mi. 24fc2
47ft 47ft
24 lift 19ft
10 -10
3 3
_ 7ft Ift
183 10ft 11
33 3ft 4ft
3 7ft 7ft
1025ft KU25ft
10 25ft 26ft
5 4ft 4ft
1
70
U
9-16 2ft+l-16
47% 47%
lift 19%+ ft
10 lfr + ft
2ft+ ft
8 .+ ft
lOftH- ft
Sft 4%+ ft
JV4 7%-ft
25+ft
25ft 26 + ft
4ft 4ft- ft
7ft
10ft
7%
Ift
12ft 10ft Sabin Roy J6
16ft 13ft Saftaurd Ind
32ft 23ft STJhnTrk .90
Ift Sft SatemBr .10 b
ift 5 S CariM .156
14ft 13% SDiaeiMS ptl
18 11% S DiaG jrfJO
21 21 S*nJR8 3JU
lift lift Sanlla* 0»
6 ft 5% Saraent Ind
61% Saturn Alrwy
Ift
2 10ft 10% -10ft 10%+ ft
57 13% 14ft 13% 14 + ft
16 28% 29ft. 28% 29ft+lft
19 7% 7ft 7% ,7ft+ ft
£ 5% 5ft 5% Sft
1 14% 14% 141% U%+ ft
2 11% 14% 14% 14%+ 2ft
15 22% • 23ft 22% 2»+l
48 15% 15ft 15 15 — %
Sft 54J 5% Sft
14% 916 Technttrol
16ft 12 ToitflBC JO
133% 73 T depromt
20 ft 8% Tanna Carp
*5% Tonntw wt
. sft Twwwy Era
6 % Tensor Cp
Sft Tar Hud TOf
30ft Tesoro Pet
6 % Taxatar
13ft Textron wt
«ft tfi co ine
11. ThorMkt jQo
15ft ThrlTtlmt A 1
ZftTMA CO
9ft
39ft
8%
18
8%
13
17ft
aft
27
10ft
11%
10%
11M+ %
2
17
13
17
512
323
95Vj
101
95ft
B5»+2ft
m
9
10%
9
7%+lftX
42
6
6
5ft
6
23
514
5ft
5ft
5ft
6
M*
6ft
6ft
6ft +ft
29
81*
Sft
Bft
8ft+ ft
28
31%
31ft
31ft
3!ft+ ft
31
6ft
7
6ft
7 + ft
B
T6
16ft
16
16ftft%
20
6ft
6ft
6ft
6ft
37% 20% Tokhdm
1 55 Tol Ed"pf4JS z!75 58
6%
4% 6%
2Mb lift SavAStOp” ^ " J4 152 18% 18% 17ft 11 %—' ft
73 STftSiVln 45 +2ft
22 10ft 10ft 10ft 10%
294 96 102 96 _ “*
17 » « M
5 ii lift Uft n + ft
t 13ft 1316 13ft 13ft
7 10ft 10ft 10
9ft Savoy Indust
90ft Saxon Indust
5% Sayra Ftsher
10% Scam Imtru
SchenultA JO
... .. Schiller 16
46ft 34% Science Mat
flft ift Sclent AtJanf
14- 10 Scipa Indust
17 13ft SconysH .10a
28% 19ft Scurry Rain .
14
125
6ft
T9ft „
16ft 12
14ft 10
99%+ 2ft
»+ %
10 — ft
2 5% 16% Tonka Cp JO
23ft 12 Tool Retrcti
31% 25ft Twin Cp job
141% 7ft TownCtry JD
■4ft 4 Trans Car lb
33% 15ft TransUnc .60
8% 6 Transalr -02g
15ft 12ft Tramoarm
14% 10ft TWA Wt
73 62ft Tri Cont wt
lift 8% TrlStMot .381*
22ft 16 TrlBnaP .l5g
3ft 2 7-16 Tubas Mex
23ft 13ft Tyco Labs
S 11% Tift 11% lift
40 17 17 16ft 1 + ft
5 2% 2% 2ft 2% +%
225 27% 30ft 27 27 +1
59% 58 59%+2
9 24 24 24 24 + ft
160 15ft 16ft 15ft TO6+1V.
2 29ft 29ft 29ft 29ft+ ft
88 9 10 8ft - 9ft+ ft
15 4ft -4% 4 4 —ft
32 15ft 164* 15ft 16ft+ ft
3 6ft 6% 6ft 6%+ ft
10 14 14ft 13ft 14ft+ ft
44 lift 1214 lift 1]ft+ ft
1 44% 44% 64% 6<%+l
13 8ft 8ft 8ft Ift
122 20ft 24ft 20ft 22%+7%
13 3% 3 3-16 3% 3%
51 14ft 15% 14% 15ft+ ft
March 23, 3820
Brin
Ten
4»M~ Glass ... 16T
Canon Gam ... 449
Dal Sip. Print 361
Pu]l Bank 313
Full Photo 680t
KaysJfcawa E. ... 400
Hitachi ....: 737
Honda — 182
C. Xtoh — 166
Jap. Air Uses. 1.710
Kao Soap 331
Kassal £ 019
Kirin Brewery- 190
Komatsu 283
Kubota L Wb. 280
1 Prerloua.
Mount E lad.
MaUu EL Wka
Mltan Hvy lad.
Mltsu Ss Co.
MUaukosU ...
Nippon Eire. .
Shlsrldo ..... U50
Sony Corp .. 3.3Tb
R iimlUm n Bt 340
TairitD Marine 130
Tafceda Chem. 428
Teijin - 81
Tokyo Marino 278
Toyo Rayon - 144
Toyota Motor. 848
European Markets
(Yesterday's dosinjr prices
in local currencies)
Amsterdam
5 *% 36ft 36ft 3646+ %
8 8% eft 8% Sft+ ft
6 10% 10ft 1016 10%+ %
' - — 14% 15 + ft
33 14% 15
9%
12
■ft
12ft
10ft
lift
Ift SMAIMIU 30'
- - - ‘aftr
7 Saa Conte-..
7 SbdPlywd .10
7ft Sealectro CP
Ift Seen Ind M
95 Season An
81 25ft 27ft 25ft 26"4+ %
5 aft Ift 8ft ift+ %
7
7ft
8
9
7ft
7ft
Bft
9ft
7 7ft+ ft
7ft 7ft+ ft
8 «%+ ft
9 9K+ %
10ft
9%
1A.
12 %
14
14ft
16ft
14
10ft 10ft 10ft 10ft+ ft
IMirSKMfl -198 219 18% »% 18ft 20%+lft
5ft Ucflco Corp
6 ft UIP Corp
6 ft Unexcelled
10 Un Flnl If
T2ft U Go* Can J2
lift Un Invest .70
12*4 UnStOm .10a
lCft Un Aire Pd JO
ift 3 13-16 Unit Asb ■ j07g
8 % 4ft Unit Bd Cart
14- UnDolIrSt JO
1 6 1 * 6%
37 TA 7ft
66 7ft 8%
15 11 lift
11 IP* 13%
6 % Seeman Bros
17% 13% SalasCorp JO
13ft lo’A seile Lalz JO
11 % «6 Seawoyab Ind
16ft 13% Servlsco J8
6 % 5 Servo Corn
18ft ‘16ft Setvetrorde
9% 8% Seton Co J5
S'ti Shew- Sh M
6 H Shah moon In
4ft Shaft ck Donn
9% SheffWat JO
61% 47ft SherWod Med
3t* 2ft Slboney Core
16ft 11% Sierra P Ind
1614 lift Starred n Cp
8 % Slgmelns -50f
7ft Stand Co JO
SVi Silicon Tran
Sft SlmcoStrs JO
9 STmkJns JO
SlitiPlaxl J5b
Simplex Wire
7 714 «ft 714+ %
14% 14ft 14% 14ft+ ft
10%' 11 10% 11 +ft
J 514 ■ 4ft
14 lift 14
5% 5w4 5%
15ft
4%
3
5
7
22
8
75
6% 61*+ U
7ft 7ft
7ft Bft+ ft
11 llft+ ft
13ft 13ft
11
-S +14
1J\4+ ft
514
3ft
an
4%
914
6ft
lift
16
16ft
16ft
15ft
16ft- ft
8
8%
Bft
8%
. 8ft- ft
7
5%
5%
5ft
5%+ ft
6
7ft
a
7%
7ft
13
2%
5%
5ft
5ft+ U
73 9ft 18
23 4914 53
159 2ft 2ft 2ft
73 12ft 13H 12ft 1314+ ft
13ft 13% 13ft 13ft+ ft
9ft IB + 14
4914 52 +314
2ft+ ft
13ft
■ft
18ft
7ft
lift .
22ft 11
33ft 27
5
Bft .
Sft
Sft
8ft + ft
7
7V1
7ft
7ft
7ft
15
■ft
8ft
8ft
8ft+ ft
2
5ft
6
Sft
6 +1*
17
Bft
36
35ft
18ft
34
12ft
20ft
Uft
10%
12ft
18ft
4ft
12
20
26 lift lift 11% 11ft+ ft
28 —ft
15ft 9% SMcIn SmRffl
29% 2414 SkoMDrs JO
9 ■ Sky CUy Str*
2414 lift SndcCorp J2
48 34 SridcpfA 1JS
614 SMD Ind .17
Solltron J2
Sonder Bidet
2814 2714 2814— ft
11 % 11 11 %
Bft -
40ft 25
34% 25
— « *. t- .... -— - 28ft 28ft 28
SPA 27ft SlncyenOII_2 1110 28
3 24ft Mft 24% 24%+ ft
4 8% 8% 9 I
279 16ft 17% 16ft lift— %
61 34% 35 34% 34ft+ ft
10 8' 8% 7ft 8%+ ft
247 32ft 34% 32% 33%+2%
25 27ft 28 27 27
2 15% t« 15ft 1»+ ft
A Sounde$Jon 25 'A4% fl%Hr n
2M SCOrg PflJO ilOO Wh 2T* 27% 27%+%
lift SC 5J0pf US' 3 19ft 19ft 19ft. IW+)i
p 22 22
11 14 14
6 14 14
8 7ft 7ft
10 43ft 45
20 %
13ft
2ft Unit Foods
65
4
4ft
Sft un Natl* Inv
70
Sft
6ft
2ft UnNotlnv wt
10
3%
2%
7ft UNtllnv pf-70
13
Sft
au
12ft Un PDys joe "
14
12ft
IZft
12 Un Rnfln .15
11
12ft
12ft
7ft US Ceramic
16
7ft
8ft
25 US Filter
65
26
»%
2404 USHome Dev
84
3Dft
33
13U US Leu J 8
53 18
19
24 US Nat Rare
162
27%
31%
9 USRadm JOt
16
9ft
9%
18ft US Rltln 120
29
20ft
71%
10ft US Reductn
5
10ft
10%
BV. USRubR J5e
18
9
9ft
9ft US Smelt at
39
9ft
10%
lift Unltrode Cp
13
lift
12ft
Sft Univ Cigar
6
4
4
7ft Ur tool .141
16
8
8ft
14ft Univ Mar 20
IT
18ft
lift
23ft UrlftBldfl wt
3
27
28
16 URS Systems
96
17%
18V*
12 UtailldSu 20
1
12ft
12ft
13V. 13% 13ft 13%+ ft
13% 13% 13% 13%
10% 11% 10ft
4 4 3ft
514 514 5
14% 15% 14ft
Sft
Sft
2%
Bft
+ ft
+1-16
5
15 + ft
4 + %
6 + ft
214+ %
814+ %
AKZO
A!fl embank. ■
I AmroBank--.
, A'damRubb. .
Billiton
| Fofcker
Helnekon..;..
H. V.A.
i Holland-Afri„
I Hoogovens...
I. OJ5. Ltd
[_P.1_
K.LJA.
I Nad. Kabel..
; Philips new..
Robeco- ......
Rolineo.
sIDutch.-
Unflever.....
VerMach ... .
94 JO
240
5S.99
48
149
81-40
1*3-60
61
87 JO
111JS
Sill*
510ft
130 JO
493
63J0
239.10
U9
13* JO
1D3J8
75-50
fOSMgt new.
Mar&5pen...
MetelBox....
Nicholas
RendMlnn...
Ronk-Org
Rhokena
Rolis-Reyca..
RootesA
RoyelDuleh.-
R.TZ
Shell
Tube Invest..
Union Carp...
Vickers
WarL3%
West Deep-
West Drlet...
west Hold...
West Min
WoolW
12% 12ft+ ft
7ft 8%+ ft
26 )PA+1ft
29ft 33%+lV.
17ft 18g3- 3
27*4 29%+2ft
«4+ %
Brussels
9%
10%
Bft
9ft
10'*— 14
Bft- ft
10 + ft
I Anted
Asl.d JAInes. .
Cock-Ougree.
Eled rebel...
Lambert
Pelroflna
, Ph.Gcvaert..
5cc.G6n*raIe.
Un-Mlnllre. .
4.320
2,150
1.744
4,820
1,790
2,110
7^06
12,925
L892
3%
a
16%
27
3ft— %
a + %
18ft- 14
28 +lft
17% 12% SorpPap ,80b
23 19ft SCS55Ipf 1J0
15ft 13ft SC 4.32pf IM
14ft 13ft SC 4 J4pf 1.06
■ 5ft Seu Real&Ut
47 40 SouRoy 1.2Bb
24 18% Sw For ind
14ft 12% Swn tnv .70
17 12% Spacttv Rest
< Specter Ind
Oft Spectra J£
... 9ft SoeedOP Jit
20V4 13% Spencer Shoe
20ft 17 StdAllIan JO
lift 91* Std Containr
22% 21% Std Coosa 1.30
12ft 1914 Std Drtd J0 b
21% 21ft+ft
13ft 14
14 14 + %
7% 7%
43% 45 +114
8%
15%
12 %
118 21ft 23ft 21ft 22ft+l%
4
9
27
13 13ft 13 13ft+.ft
13% 13ft 13% 13ft+ ft
_ 6% 6% 4% 6ft
xlD 13% 14 13% 13ft+ %
9 10ft 10% 10% 10%+ %
22 16% 17 .16% 16ft+ft
3 17ft 17% 17ft 17%+%
5 9% 9ft 9% *'
4 22% 22% 22
19% 15% Valles Stk H
10 ift Valley Met
6% 5% Vabpar .15e
15ft 13% Van Dorn JD
5% 4 Vanguard Inf
14% 8% Vara Inc
35ft 2614 Veeco Instru
19ft TO* Venice Ind
24ft 10% Vemttren
q 11% 7ft Vastly Co
21% 15% Votes Ofstire
10% 7% VIctLaN ,20b
54% 46% VlcLceN pf 3
25ft 17% Vlewlcx
27% loft Vlkoe nc
10ft aft Visual Electr
13% 10% Vest Mfs JO
\s>a 11% VolMercb JO
20% 13% VTR Inc
8% 6% Vole Corp JO
7% 5% Vulc Inc JO
7 15% 15% 15% 15%+ %
14 6% 7% 6% 6%+%
11.5% 5H 5% 5%— %
2 13ft 13ft 13ft 13ft+ %
60 4 4ft 4 4%
40 9ft 9% 9% 9%+ ft
62 33 34% 32ft 33 + ft
7 16 16 15ft 16 + %
243 13% 14% 13 13ft+l
4 8% 8% 8% B%+4
12 16% 17ft 16% 17ft+ 4
61 7ft Bft 7% B%+ ft
6 46% 47% 46% 47%+ ft
49 18% 18% 1B% 18ft
115 12% 13% 12% 12%+ ft
15 6% 6% 6% 6%- %
9 11% 12% 11% 12%+1
21 11% 12 11% 12
39 13% 14*6 13ft 14%+ %
2 7ft 7ft 7% 7%
5 7 7% 7 7%+ft
Dusseldorf
AEG 215.10
187
Boyer
Ccnunerzbfc..
Cont.GummL
Daimler-Benz
Demon
Duet3ank...
DresdeBank..
[ Gets Bergw. .
1 Hoeschter....
Hoesch
Kerstadt.....
Koufhof
KHD
: Luflhansa —
Manruumarm
AXilan
Flat
FI ns Me r
Generali
fta loftier
LeRlnasC....
Monied Is
OUvetti
Pirelli
SnlsVisca
Term
Paris
161 J0
274-50
140
402
170JO
349.90
279 JO
75JD
207 JO
83
332
237
| Metallgesel!..
ilnStahl...
Rhein
RWE new....
Siemens
Vo'Kawagjm
Vsba
67
146 JO
570
131
184
222
284-50
169.10
9%+ %
22
15 10% 10% 10ft 10%+ %
20ft 18% StDrad PH.60 Z100 20% 20ft 2D% 20ft+ ft
1%
11*4
4% StdMetal J9f
.... 7ft Std Pac Corp
27ft 23% St* Prad 1 JD
28ft 27 Std Shrs lJHf
14 11 Std Thomson
7% 4ft Stanley Avia
2ft 1 15-16 Stanrock Ur
5% 3% Stenwlck Co
1% 7 Stardust .13*
10% 9 StarSmkt JO
31% 20ft Stalham Inst
13 Ift SteinHal J5b
Ift 5. Stellar Ind
25% 20 Stepan Ch JO
II 6% Star! Electro
12ft 9ft Sterl Extr J4
6ft 5 SterPrec J5f
19ft 14% StemMtl nJ5
30% 27% Stwnco A
30% 20ft Stop Shop .90
42% 33ft STP Co JOe
9% ift Struthr wells
29U 17% Sty Ion corp
9ft Sft Summit Oro
30% 24t* Sun Elec JO
‘ Ift 6% Sunelr Elodr
6% 4% Supercrt Mg
15% 12ft Sup Isurg Mf
40ft 24% Supencope
5% 4% Supranlcs Cp
12% Oft Susauehana
15 12 Susqueh Pf 1
11% 15% Sutra M Jle
9ft 7ft 5 vn alloy .Mt
69% 31% Syntax .40h
49% 33% Systems Eng
5% 4 Tamar Elect
15% 14% TgstyBk Ma
26% 15% Tech Aerefm
27% 11% Technic Oper
4ft S’* Technic Tape
6%+ ft
10 + ft
24%+ ft
28 + V*
12%+ %
5%+ ft
2
3ft+ %
714— %
TA+ %
Sft 6ft Sft
56 9 10% 9
2 24 24% 24
38 31 21 28
2 12% 12ft 12ft
4 5% -5% 5%
34 2 2% 2
7 3ft 3ft 3%
2 716. 714 7%
3 9% 9% 9% ._. -
94 24% 27 24% 2514+1%
38 Bft 9ft Aft 9Vk+ %
3 5% 5ft 5% 5ft+ft
14 21% 22% 21 V* 22%+l
26 7 7% 7 • 7ft+ %
8 10ft 11 10% 11
50 5% 5% 5% 5%
It 14ft 15ft 1414 15ft+ ft
3 28ft 28% 28% 28%+ U
85 28ft 29% 28ft 29 + ft
48 4S% 41% 40% 41 + ft
7 7ft 7% 7ft ~
145 24% 26ft 24%
45 5% 6 - 5ft
lift
4ft
20ft
11
5ft
18%
7ft- %
26%+lft
6 + %
10 2S%. 28 . 23% 26_+ %
4ft-. ..
5 +%
_ nc' in s%
a 4 % 5 4 ft .
13 15% 15ft 15ft T5ft ,,
83 25ft 28% 25ft 27ft+l%
S 4% 4ft 4% 4ft+ %
78 11% 11% 10ft 10ft+ %
12 13% 14% 13ft t4
37 17ft 17ft 17ft 177*+ ft
5 7ft 8 7ft 8 + %
774 33ft 34ft 33% 34%+]%
193 36ft 38ft 36ft 3^+1%
’ 4ft 4ft 4ft
15% 15% 15% 15%+ %
30% 15ft Wabash J0
2 2% aOftWackenhut
13ft BV* Waltham Ind
51ft 36ft Wang Labs
8ft 4% Ward Fds wt
64* 5% Watsco .16
30ft 24% Wall MCL JD
13ft 10ft Welmati Co
8ft WcllcoE .10d
3ft Wentworth
11% West Ch 90
7 W estates Pet
3 Westec Carp
.... 14 WstnFIn .log
37% 20% WnlntHot JO
* in* 7ft Wn N nc lea i
11% 5% Westm Orbls
52ft 44%West Un' Inti
48% 32% Wheelab JOa
9 Whlppany JO
9ft Whitaker JD
3% White Eagle
5 Whitehall El
17% Whiting 1 JO
ift Whittaker wt
4% Wichita Ind
15 WIIIcok Gibb
42ft 32ft Wmhouse
Sft 5ft Wllshlra J2t
22ft 15ft Wilson Co US
5ft 3ft Wilson Co wt
+ 6% Wilfcjr Bras
10% Bft Wilson Ph JQ
16ft 9ft WllsonSpt JO
5 3% WllsonSpt wt
12% 9ft Wlnkelmn JO
9ft
13V*
4%
7%
22%
7ft
6%
18%
514 17% 19% 17% 18ft+l%X
2 21% 2T% 21% 21%
25 Bft 9% 8% 9%+lft
228 39% 47% 39% 43%+3%
16 ift 4% ift 4ft+ ft
4 5% 5% 5% 5%— ft
7 30% 30ft 30% 30ft+ ft
XU 10ft 11% 10ft 11%+ ft
14 9ft 9% 9ft 9%+ %
2 4 4 4 4
7 20% 20ft 20% 20ft+ %
145 8 8% 7ft B%+ ftX
61 ift 4% 4% ift
20 15% 16% 15% 16%+ ft
47 24ft 26% 24% 26 +1%
9 9ft 9ft 9ft 9ft+ %
48 5ft 6 Sft 5ft+ ft
6 47% 48% 47ft 48%+ %
34 34 Uft 34 35 +1%
9% 9
11 11
ift 4ft
5% ift
19ft 19ft
5ft 4ft
Sft 5%
16%
32%
London
3 9%
1 11
11 4%
30 5
2 19%
32 ift
21 5%
56 16ft 17%
53 32% 33%
41 7
10 15ft
33 4
15 8%
4
30
33
1
ift
9%
7ft 6ft
16% 15ft
4 3ft
8% -8ft
9%
16% 1<
m 4%
9% 9%
ift ift ift
9
11
4%
5%+ %
19ft+ ft
4%+ ft
5ft+ %
16%+ ft
33%+ %
16 +ft
Ift+'ft-
9ft+ %
16
4%— %
9%+ %
Anglo-AmCp.
Anglo-Amln-.
Barely Bank-.
BeechamGr..
Bowater
BritAmTob. .
i BrII.Oxygen..
Brit. Petra la..
Brit.LeyM...
Chartered...
CourtauUs. ..
Daggafont...
DeBeer Der.
Decca Rec...
Distillers
Dunlop
ElMus.lnd...
FreeSIGed...
GEC
Glaxo Gr.....
Gt.UnlvJt.,
68 / 1 %
21%
64/9
39/7%
52/-
104/3
9/4%
92/-
9/9
55/3
27/1%
2/6
52/-
60/9
24/1%
33/3
48/i
120 /-
23/3
75/9
58/6
AlrLlquIde...
Bighln. ......
BNC1
Can Pacific. .
CG.E.
cs.f m
Cltroln
CTeBancalre..
Cr6d.Comm.-
Cr£d.Lyomi..
DeBoers 100..
EssoSland...
FlnPor.BP..
Fr-J*etretes. .
IBM
ImpOn
IntNickCan...
Mach.Bull....
Michetln.....
Mobil
OmnlumPet^
Path£Marc...
P£chlney
Peugeot.
Radio Techn.
Rhokana
Rh. Poulenc. .
Rio Tints....
Rove (Dutch..
St.Gobain —
Schneider....
Shell
Slmca
Soc.G6n6rale.
SuezGeFIn...
Thomson—...
Ugine-Kuhl— .
Youngs %%...
Guinness..... 27/1%
| Hawker-sidd.
I Hudson-Bay..
ImpChemlc-
38/-
146/3
54/- Un-B-Su"
19
10 %
2%
7%
9%
9ft
4 1 15-16 1 15-16 1 15-16 1 15-16
14% Work Wr JO 8 lift 141* lift lift
7% wrather Cp
5ft Wyend Ind
6ft Wvle Labs
8% WVomlu JMa
17% 16% Yank Ra JOg
29 17% lift 17% ]8.. j%
46 20% 22
66 5% 6
20ft 21%-.
5% 5ft+ %
10
32%
7ft
7% Zero Mfg .10
16% ZimrHom J4
5%ZMa Foods
43
7%
8%
7%
Bft+<
46 1 15-16
2
1%1
15-16
12
Sft
Sft
5ft
5ft,
54
6ft
7ft
6ft
7 +
3
84*
Sft
8%
8ft-
4
17%
17ft
17%
17ft+
17
7ft
7%
7%
7%+
165
T9ft
19%
W
19%+1
1
5ft
5%
5ft
5ft
MBW YOKS, Mawb- Casn
prices tn primary markets ax regis-
tered today m New Ydrl t wero:.
ctendltr eal eelt
room
Wheal 2. red bub .
Oats 2 whtta bo.
TEXTILES
METALS
t T¥wL
Test of o
ti.nri
91.65ft
bo. UJU
1.83ft
„.... lUMP's
1.43
.. « .821*
90»i
ML 1.631#
X.ldft
..« • J3
.43%
t.53
a ift
Td .18%
.Uft
ton 88.00
84 08
ion. 88.00
83.60
F1U 4M8
26-27
U.S. Comiuodity Prices
Und. spot B) — —
Copper elec, tt -
T1&. iStralUj. lb. ..
Zinc, E Sn L beau B>
SUver H.T. os -
COMMODITY Indices
Moody's index (base 100
Deo. * 1 . 1531 ) — « 5.0
■ NomlnaL t Asked.
.58% J4
JBV, .64%
1.18 L68
.15% -14
LB8% 1.7l
378.0
WEW TORE FUTURES
Miircb 95, 30Tb
sugar: May 3J8, July
Wbrld sugar: May 3.M, July 3.65-68.
Sept. 3.68. Oct. 3.54 b. Nov. 3.04 b. March
■71 3.80 JL May T1 3 JO.
Wool: May 104.0 b, July 104.2 b. Oct.
108-0 b, Dec. 106.0 b. March '71 106.5 b.
Woof tops: May 160.0 b, Oct. 153.0 b.
Dee. 161.0 b. _ „
Cocoa: May 28.61. July 28.80, Bept.
20.80. Doc. 30.10. March ’71 30.18. May
'71 30.76.
copper: May 74.80. July 72.60. Sept.
70.70, Oct. 88 06, Dec. 66.70, March 71
M Stlvar: March 160.80. April 189.80, May
101.40, July 194J0. Sept. 198.40. Dye.
303.70. Jan. ’71 2P5.00. March ‘71 208.80.
May '71 219 JO. July Tl 215.M.
Orange Juice (frozen concentrated i:
May 3TJ0 b, July 36.30, Sept. 39.36 b,
Nov. 38.80. Dec. 36.88 b, J an. ‘71 37.05.
we can tio for you
what you cant do
for yourself
Like make you a successful International investor.
That’s what you are when you put your money to work ^
through one of the BUTTRESS INTERNATIONAL FUNDS.
And you can invest either dollars or sterling.
Here*s what we offer:-
The worid-wide connections and expertise of top L ° n A ^
U2ARD BROTHERS. As the Fund's Investment advisers LAZARDS msu rethat you ey
is invested wherever and whenever good growth opportunities occur in Japa p
for example.
^ A better return for your money. Based in Bermuda the Funds pay no income,
Profits or Capital Gains Tex— which means more profit for you.
^ Investment in the growth potential of the North Amerieanerono^. Through
ihtte funds, sterling holders can share in this market without feeling the full impact or
fos dollar premium.
You may Ifta to know lh«t you can also invest In the Fund* through * Uj* *° r,ey “
either by a single or annua! premium - end get substantial » 1
You will certainly want to know more about these Funds, so drop ^ ■
when you live end whether you are interested in the life po icy sc
you -all the fact* and figures by return.
Byttrus fnnstutBiit ServicBS LfiBitod
PA S«x 190, HAMILTON, SERMU DA Tel ox Bermuda
COTTON 2
Way
Jul
Oct 26.13
Dec ' 26J4
Mar —
May +-
25 JO 2SJ2 25 JD z25J7
25.87 25J7 25 JO Z25J4 —7
26.13 26-13 Z26.ll
26J4 26J2 Z24 J5
— — Z26J5
— — 236.68
—2
—3
+2
POTATOES
Malm closed 3 cents higher to 2 cents
lower. Sales 2J44 contra eta.
High Low Cion
Apr 355 W1 342
May 4.05 3M 3.96
Not 2J6 2J3 2J4
May
ilul
CHICAGO FUTURES
Prav.
Open HWi Low Close Close
WHEAT
Dec
Mar
1.44ft 1.45 J4% TJ4^* 1.44%
1J7U 1J7ft 1 J7% 1J7% 1J7%
1.39ft 1.39% lJ9ft 1 J9V* 1 J9ft
1J4 1J4% 144 1J4% 1J4V*
1J71* 1.47% l.<7 1J7% 1.47ft
Mey
Jul
Sep
Dec
Mer
CORN
May
Jul
AUB
Sell
Nov
Jen
Mer
SOYBEANS
1 J2ft 1J2% 1 J2ft 1 J2ft 122ft
03% 1 J3ft 03% 03% 03%
Olft 1 Jl% lJlft Ul% 121%
1.17% 1.17ft 1.17% 1.17ft 7.17%
121% Oil* 121% 121% 121%
Sep
Oct
10.49 10.19
9.93 9J9
B9.72 9J9
923 B9J9 B9.26
8.98 9 25 925
8.99 8.79
8J7 b8J7
825 B8J3
Jul
Aug
Seh
OCT
Dec
Jen
Mer
72J0
71.48
70J0
69 JO
69.00
6925
Apr
May
Jun
Aug
Oct
Dec
Feb
Apr
Jun
2J9 229% 228% S J9% 229%
223ft 223% 222ft 223% 223ft
222% 222% 221ft 222% 222ft
224ft 2 25 223ft 224% 224%
221% 2J2% 2J1U 222% 221%
226ft 227ft 226 227ft 224ft
2J0% 221ft 2.60 221% 2.60%
SOYBEAN OIL
Mey 10.16 1DJ0 10.10
EiT 9J5 923 9J3
Aua 9J9 9J3 9.45
9J3 920
9 25 9-25 ...
BJ1 920 820
Atar W1 ‘bS
SOYBEAN MEAL.
^ 7220 72J0 71.90 71.95 72.45
72.40 71.95 71.95 78^5
71 JO 7120 a7125 71.40
7025 69J5 a 69.85 B7D.10
69J5 6920 69 JO 69.10
6925 6920 69.10 aMJO
6925 69 J5 O69J0 ofi? JO
Mer SIL> 1J»J0 1.9120 12920 1.91 JU 129^
19920 22220 1.9820 22020 1.99JQ
10320 225.60 22220 22420 223.30
104 JO 22920 225.80 2.W.40 22620
1920 11220 22820 111 JO 229.10
2J420 114.90 11420 11420 11130
LIVE BEEF 32^5 3QJO
32JD 32.42 32 JO 32J5 32.10
31,45 31 JO 3122 3127 31.40
Feb 3. M •» SSJ3
113825 n3025
LIVE M 2(jb 26.M 2425 24.40 25 25
2720 2725 27.47 27 JO 27J2
via 2 6JS 26.87 JSJ0
* 15 25 JO 24.75 2520 25.10
mm 23 JO 2325 23J2 2320
- e Mjw »25 22.97 2322 62195
Sales: April 150; June 85; July Hi; Aug
Oct 16; Dw9.
SHELL EGGS 5325 3U5 34JS
3325 3320 33J0 33J0 3325
3325 33J5 3320 B.15 3320
__ — — n5JQ A3520
« M20 »
35J0 35 JS 3420 3420 035J5
«1o 35.18 35.10 35.10 35.10
setae- Aorll 685/ Jun*. 30 '
^ ss SS SBJS
,i m} 41.03 40.10 40,75 a 40.70
* 3525 3625 35-90 3525 35.W
Sl»: » J“Y 2.59<; Aug 129
F K MnHi ^ Wm
Apr
Jun
Aug
Oct
Dec
Apr
Jun
Jul
Aug
Oct
Dec
Apr
Mey
Jim
Jul
5(9
Oct
Dec
Jen
Mey
Jul
Aug
Feb
Zorich
Hk One Fully
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a
• fso'TJ pjn MwJfl © hh ^ qixonh^ ncjw Wrt^w.n gpuim^i kmi^h^w wriHiwww L >3HSiW^ r 1 *^ pp i* i-i d a* ► w *•
Page 14
INTfiBJVAllOKAL wkratji TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, MAKffl 26, 1970
j ^ '
X wove PfBftN
V^iTH- An. A*V HEAfeTAaoSbi/L.
x uve H£S EVEN /W?6 *I»AN
i AAo wJouu> Move
itoMmiis mo *&£****
COOUSt °F /M&HTy WVtf^
fb* He*-
ttJftuM Orttluwt
c&fta~ ©2bt /»hu Wte.
^non. tM. ?
3 HAT* A ftrjtfoM
WHO TAWS ^PVANT^G-F.
stweo,
A^thp^*
r
BLONDEE
BRIDGE
0 By Alan Truscott
The diagramed deal contribut-
ed 12 Tnfampfavwiai match points
to the victory of tile team of
TBrfgar TTapinn, tn the Vander-
bilt Knockout Team champion-
ship, in Portland, Ore^ earlier
this week.
At both taw**, South played
in t h ree no-trump. When Sid-
ney Lasaxd of the wa.pTn.-n team
held the South cards, he even-
ed one diamond as shown in
Mw rfia^rrajw He and his part-
ner, George Rapee, use a range
of 15-17 points for a no-trump
opening bid, so his hand was
too strong for that hid.
Wot made a venturesome
overcall of qtib heart, l acking
both the general strength and
the heart length Tim-ma-ny re-
quired for a vulnerable over-
call. North’s double was neg-
ative. implying a moderate hand
fnoinrirng a f our -card spade
suit. When South jumped to two
no-trump, be indicated a h a nd
of 18-19 points and a heart
stopper, »nri North raised ’ >
game.
With the heart w«g marked
on his right by the bidding.
West should have avoided a
heart When he led the
queen. Hazard took full advant-
age of the trick thus given to
~him He won with the king
qt-iH led a low club to dummy's
queen. Bast took his ace, won
the next trick with the heart
ten shifted to a spade.
South won with the
ace. He then led a heart, per-
mitting West to take his too
heart winners. The shift was to
a rf»b, frq>»n by the jack In the
closed h fvnfl The position was
then:
NORTH
4 78 *
<3
O Q20 -
4 £6
EAST
43
V
O 962
*98
as
Previous Puzzle
SOUTH
4 K10
- —
O AK74
*
South cashed the spade king,
entered dummy with a diamond.
faa ri to the queen, and played
the chib king, squeezing West.
When the fa*nd was replayed,
Sam wahrfa. anH Eric Murray
defeated three no-trump. West
led a rf<ampn ri and the ten won
in. dummy. South tried a spade
frnpBse and, when this lost, the
defenders were able to take the
club ace and three heart trick?
well as the spade trick.
NORTH
4 7862
954
O Q10
* KQ54
EAST
4 973
V 103
O 962
* A9873
SOUTH (D>
4 AK10
O K762
O AK74
4 72
Both sides were vulnerable.
The bidding: .
South West . North East
10 1 .<5 DbL Pass
2 NT. Pass 3 NT. Pass
Pass Pass
’ West leg the.heart queen.
WEST
4 Q54
<3 AQJ8
0 7853
4 105
DENNIS THE MENACE
‘iVeeCTHIM IN the earns NOW.
6ut idonTthink he likes rr.*
I —Utai ictouttUtA eat/ «aMt
\9 iiwiujuiUMJim.uiBiunwau
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.
R1COU
mm
mmmvm
| KOSTE
mm
■
■
■
m
THODEB
WSMM
■
mm
■
NfflED
mLmWj
■
■
■
Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, as'
suggested by the above cartoon.
Mam SERBS
■BIB kre .
\xm™<ainxr
Yat triq' i
(Answers tomorrow)
JmnUm SQUAW MINUS ESTATE DAMAGE
Answers What the heungged actor performed
tatter- AN ASSUMS MANE
Books-
THE BOSTON MASSACRE
Bff Hiller B. ZObel. Norton. 373 ppw 58-59.
By Thomas Lask
— ERE to a bit of a surprise: a
very thorough telling of
th ff events that led up to the
•‘massacre’* of March 5, 1770,
In which a group of British
soldiers fired Into a crowd in
wing- street Boston. Ptvo
dead, six were wounded.
The incident has been cited
as the first battle of the Amer-
ican Revolution. It has created
a folk hero in the person of
the presumably black Crispus
Attucks, whose participation in
the fracas has somehow been
turned into a 20th-century bat-
tie for civil lights.
Above all, through the famous
engraving by Paul Revere, show-
ing the soldiers lined up in a
Ole nonchalantly Shooting into
the crowd, and through the po-
lemical wr i tings of Samuel
A da ms, who would not let the
case rest even after the courts
had decided, tbe Boston mas-
sacs kept wflnnfai rage hot
and colonial feelings on edge
through the revolution. As a
propaganda vehicle, the event
was custom-made for the rebel-
lious side.
However, before you rise to
sing “Yankee Doodle,'* you ought
to be warned that the author’s
reading of the story is no true-
blue Car red. white and blue)
star-spangled defense of colo-
nial outrage and suffering. This
may niot be revisionist history,
but it will do until something
more fanatically Tory comes
along.
Ttw> author is a lawyer and a
tea cher of law, at the moment
associate professor at Boston
College, wr»* his respect for it
as wwwpnt of society is
wirw-mnnut , without the force of
the law, he all but comes out
and argues, social instituti ons
win crumble and we will an
be returned to tbe jungle.
This is roughly what happen-
ed in Boston in the five years
before the shootings of March 5.
Laws were evaded or violated—
mob ride took over. Men would
not testify, juries would not in-
dict, and if an iTiHiptmwnt were
secured, win** would convict.
Once tile radicals In Boston
discovered, the author says, that
they could rule effectively in tha
city through threats, mayhem
«md promised violence, the pos-
sibility of resolving any differ-
ences with the mother country
through peaceful means disap-
peared.
and if there are any villains
fa the. piece, they are men like
Sam Adams rabble-rouser and
demagogue, Richard Dana,
a partisan magistrate, who did
what he could to make matters
more grave and to role always
in favor of tha crowd.
Mr. Lask reviews books for
The Neat York Tines,
Barcelona
Galleries
Erwin Bechtold, Galeria Reno
Metras, Cornejo de Cknto,
331, through March. . ..
Erotica in slm pHftafl form,
male and female genitals en-
closed in part of a: -triangle or
on top of one, .dr as part of
a geometric patten*— sometimes
a repeated pattern— aHon white
canvases with little color, just
red, yellow or green; the larger
paintings have the color ap-
plied as cut-outs of bright red
or blue linen paper; the result
is decorative, analytical, Ger-
manic.
* * *
Mr. Zobel does not defend the
policies of tbe men in London
or their shortsighted attitudes
that resulted In these poli c ies.
Too many of the men were
inept, oblivious to the f eelin gs
of the colonist s »-nH ignorant
of what went on overseas.
There is certainly no need to
rehash again the arguments on
both sides. E ac h had Its logic.
But the author might have
mentioned that in its nature it
is a quarrel that existed before
the colonists came to blows
With Tfagifmd that is still
with us today: the natural re-
sentment of a powerful local
Magda Bohnnar, Sala Gasper,
Consejo de Cfento, 39,
through March.
Magda Bolmmr's works are of
the hnaginative caliber of Gaudi
or Miro. Tapestry-canvases, the
threads pulled back to make
space patterns, threads plaited
and. twisted to make a fiber
structure of triangular and rec-
tangular planes with antennae
darting out to knots— the canvas
is the protagonist of each
•“picture." The forms: crustace-
ous qr space ships; the placing
of the pigment, olive and bitter
greens, cyclamen, dark red,
white, cold and warm browns,
with touches of pink and bright
red on the knots, reinforces the
construction underneath.
— SHEILA ANNE DE BARBS',
Crossword— w ^ m By Will W eng
ACROSS
1 Ababa
6 Minute plant .
opening - - ■
11 Precursor of the
14
16 Highly prized
17 Became
insolvent
18 glance
19 Strong cleanser
21 Eastern name
22 Egyptian queen
of gods
24 Powerful beam
25 Heroic
26 Inclination
28 Door in Leipzig
29 Wading bird
30 Adduces
32 'BSd'w tha
other
33 Chessmen
35 Comprehends
36 Nine: Prefix
37 Moralistic
treatise
38 Importune
39 Fondness, in
Ir eland
40 Church list
44 Land unit ■
45 Woodland
. deities
47 Name in fashion
48 Household friend
49 Journal
51 Late columnist
52.iEriendof" -r. ■
■vegetable and
mineral
54 as the end
- ^ of. one’s nose
56 Blemishes
57 Spherical magnet
58 Bluish gray
-59 Kefauver
' ’ DOWN - -
Incarnation
Comment at
length
Family member:
Abbr.
Kind of type:
Abbr.
Prophetess
, so good
Two-wheeled
ca rx l a .
branch:
8 Navy
Abbr.
9 Butcher er of
- words •
10 Studios
11 Nautical call
12 Acid salts
13 Legendary
centaur
15 Official decree
20 Above, to a poet
23 Enrage
25 Expelled
27 Cpfs up
29 Perform
31 Drink . ' ’ ,
32 - — -pro nobis
S3 Certain fractions
34 guidance
in rocketry *
35 Legal recipient
37 Most loyal
38 Parents
39 Geography book:
Abbr.
41 Shuffle cards in
away
42 Prickly pears
43 Macaw
45 Under
colors
46 Metric measure
49 Thomas Wolfe
character
50 Corn units
53 Actress Faiww
55 Tennis division
m
SL:~-
;!«r
i «<
government against what it
thinks la the arbitrary power
of a central one.
It is the same question that
is being raised in the Southern
States and only recently an as-
pirant for mayor in New York
promised,. if elected, to separate
tbe city from the rest of New
York State
Thao Is no doubt though that
whether tbe mobs— as they are
called in the book — did exercise
disproportionate power, senti-
ment was on their side. Feeling
in tbe town ran against Lon-
don. Smuggling was common,
the most respectable resisted
and avoided paying duties, and
united action against the Stamp
Act, for example, was easily
achieved.
The London solution to all this
was simple: send troops, enforce
the law. But the presence of.
the soldiers only Increased the
fear of the townspeople that a
determined effort was going to
be made to curtail their liberties
further.
iH
The soldiers were made un-
welcome. They were harassed
and Insulted both by the people
and by legal restrictions. The
soldiers were understandably
bitter. Far they were being
condemned by precisely the
people they came to help.
As has happened before and
since, they were made the
victims of the bankrupt policies
of their superiors back home.
I ncident piled up on incident
until soldiers and civilians met
In a confusion of events that
left men dead and dying Yet
so garbled were the accounts
that it was evidently easy to
get the soldiers home free.
■M,
w
'fn
IJh’
-.r-
3:-
, - s'
' '•'< a
J t; 1 .
in-
4 <.
: U
■■j n .
*fc.-
n„
•T..
:? -il
\
r 1 to
tti, -
■<v;
■V
■>l.
X
Says Players Association Attorney
-rSTEHNATlONAL HERALD TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1970
!Mt1
«*
Vi*
! tii
•^r
of Suit,’
Early Trial Date to Be Set by Judge
:: NSWT TCWK, torch 36 CAP)
ti,> V. jA j»jp6d*s application lor j
res *^ Jn his salt against
reserve clause haa
an
base-
been
‘■"’•U ij. *'
5 V.'
the Major League Baseball Players
Association, said yesterday.
Moss said Federal Judge Irving
Ben Cooper granted the application
after hearing arguments from
Flood's attorney, former supreme
court justice Arthur Goldberg, and
nine lawyers representing baseball.
Judge Cooper indicated a trial
date would be set within the next
two or three weeks.
Moss, who represents the players
7*4
' i
S*«
• *■<
;>u>n
iKed Smith
1/235
Wednesdays in whatever
camp he happens to
g, chub Feeney, the shiny
S’ 5 W* ldeIlfc ‘ ^ " toe National
•• < li,c pnLfJ? Sfcjpft 'admires his signature on
...
L, f:
LK «V
{A'hMe of U235, the shiny new
L which the ‘ big league
p ^y are using as an experiment
- padbit im .games one day a
'7 ir ^h . thumb and ; two lingers,
I"* 0 h&' up yecaey lifts the ball and. holds
... br J&pthe light He shakes it
> ■ — ... — jjjg
7?* *f -ritiy and brings It up to
, “'Wi • :
•TTou can bear ft tick,” he says.
There is conflicting testimony
regarding the animation of TJ235.
The manufacturers say factory
tests have shown it to be 5 percent
livelier than the regulation ball
that will be used In « , - ha TTT p** ,<n, fo i p
games. .Pitchers say five megatons.
The secret Is the .liquid center, a
hollow core filled with the blood
of oversexed rabbits.
It is not safe to leave It near a
leaf of lettuce:
The new ball has yellow stitching
instead of red or blue, but pitchers
say they can recognize It in the
Splinter Groups Gather Round
When Williams Holds Court
77-"- - By Shirley Povich
POMPANO BEACH. Hjl, March
Sff- (WP)^-The show pulling the
Uit"ZJ h-rt-iatings on. the Florida -East
•'•-’drailr *■ +'*'«»■ ’TVm? wtlltums show
• — I. ’ **&
vvrr
* ■"■Q.
,!, 7* fiJcr,;
• ■ ’m df
•; Mar..!-
‘■Wftjyy
: pp^a.'
a iraejp
t
„ \
I
•"-J G*p
frta, 1
■ •-•■rt an.
..jjtm’.Gc
C^t" JS the - Ted 'Williams show
programmed every morning around
the batting cage .of the Wash-
ington Senators' camp. The star
jjI the unrehearsed, two-hour
production is the manager of the
ggghas, who works without a
script, .and without censorship. His
jgngMpe does :ru>t always reflect
a firt qj fe y school background.
wid has spread rapidly of the
ft ftfnattriff goings-on at the Wash-
jogtoa-cuup, where WDliaxas, with
Us instructional .magic, threatens
tn make a J340 slugger out of each
career. 210 hitter. The. Senators,
who used to train to empty stands,
* R? us now outdrawing the New York
'■ Yankees’ workouts at nearby Ft.
‘ • • -ill cac? j^mjenisle, itad there is even, a
;■;* tie* parking crisis.; 7“ ■*
It is a M«b» now tor the tour-
• • tag baseball journalists who used
' to" -sklp the Senaters’-v-camp with
‘ ! ’ * X relish in' the dull; pre^ptable years
of Jim. Lemon, GO (Hodges and
Mickey Vernon, predecessors of
Wflliama The . dratt-l*-. WBliams,
prtf t if the ; number of. baseball
w^ers is an index, the_ Senators
,'sto. the most-reported team in
Bfito, next to the Mets. .
- fl ia at the batting cage that
. • .i.urass.t • WtBiains presides, mostly, leaving
' ' uuk t&otiwrmsttere to. his coaohes.
/.-.vr-isd Hh favorite pose is a cross-legged
-.vtf » !fe lean with one arm gripping
. .Lr cdt of the big, supporting str uts of the
. . r.;;i sasn age, and the eyes that were the
• ■ iftos 'teg in baseball in his time, aquint-
.■ <£ k tag at what ‘he sees going on,
: saf! • 'tteihttters of no "other chib get
■v • !llf the professional stuff that
• ■•' s =f , 5 wiBlams transmits to his playss.
■ uifiti Tfa jast mn~ to - hit .400, and the
tn only timt to. the past 38 years to
do go, a whopping advance
frets Simon and Shuster on a book
•:- li J due next month on the art of
^ \\\l W.KBf Mtting a baseball.
110$
, , , /J!
"'.t’rtf
■r\W
'.,.1
-J
Hey, You, Burroughs
•Bey, you, 1 Burroughs, come
.tee” and Williams called his
prize, rookie outfielder out of the
tatting cage. "You told me you
like to bit the high pitch, and now
you're standing too far back in the
tax and fooling ft up for yourself,
look, this Is the plate, and this
b where you're standing. Move up.
and ydqwill create more high balls
to at" : •
HtBTjPaul Casanova, his 210-
ler, Williams was also
"I told you this ain’t
swing. You don't syn-
l your swing-through with
and your wrists. This is
it - game. Get your rump
{taongh there first, then drag your
-tand* after ft, fast. That’s how you
power.” .
A yisHlng baseball writer said he
tad read that Williams was not
to finer of the level swing, which
*bk supposed to be the classic
*take in baseball. “That's right.
Jta. level swing is a lot of crap,”
said in a shout intended
to disabuse everybody within pos-
sible eaoshot. **I never had a level
tatag. H was always a little bit up.
took at WUhe Mays and Hank
Aaron and Mickey Mantle and the
^hergays who make the big money
to this game. They got an up-
swing.",
A. would ah be explained. Wil-
tens said. In his new book. "Now
you follffws listen,” he "said. "Take
a six-two pitcher, and he’s coming
gyerh and mostly, and that ball is
““tag at you at about a slx-
Pfreewyde.' Those ain’t my figures.
The No. 3 man tn NASA— that’s
tae National Aeronautic Space Ad-
“taafcrattcsi for ■ you guys who
taver heard of It— is helping me
my bode He gave me those
ABA Standings
SASinLK DIVISION
taWUa* ..
■ ft L
54 IS
Uim SB 34
...... 35 39
..Md X5 35
M «B
M - b
Frt. OB
.VM
J538 If
JOB «
.473 30
2» 38 m
J70 35
figures. Six degress down at you,
so your swing has got to be a little
up to get optimum Impact.".
Paul Waxier, Williams was re-
minded, prescribed hitting the ball
on top. not underneath. 'T respect
Waner. He was a great hitter and
had that speed," Williams said.
“But he was looking for leg hits.
Anything he hit on the ground
could be a hit for him. You get
only a few Waners ”
Williams looked around tnfl said,
“There’s a guy I think I straighten-
ed out. Ken McMullen. I got him
swinging like he should. He hit five
homers before the All-Star game,
and 14 In the last half when we
went to work on him."
Mike Epstein, the Senators’ 50-
homer man of last season, strolled
by and Williams said, "Hey, Mike,
show these guys your up-swing, and
how you don't drag your rump any-
more, how it goes through before
your hands do.” Epstein modeled
his batting swing for the players
wound Williams and the Senators’
Manager said. “See what I mean?”
Later, Epstein was saying in
private, “I'm a Ted Williams man.
He straightened me out. He work-
ed me to a frazzle but it was worth
all those blistered bfrads and the
buttons I popped off my shirt
swinging for him." Epstein said
the first thing Williams told him
was to straighten up in the box and
not tilt his head. “He said. *Mike,
get rid of that tilt. If it was the
right thing to do, don't you think
you'd see everybody walking down
the street with their head tilted
that way?’ "
dark. When they grip it to throw
a curve, they feel a pulse.
In St. Petersburg there is a com-
pany of small, enterprising males
whose place of business is the
pavements surrounding A2 t awg
Field. They are retailers who field
and resen at cut-rates balls that
are fouled over the grandstand or
flogged beyond the outfield walls.
Each has his station where he can
be found every day between March
7 and April 2. (St. Pete being the
spring home of both the Mets and
Cardinals, one team or the other
uses the park every day, so the
young businessmen are regularly
employed./
On the first Wednesday the U235
was In use — the CaxdJnals were
playing the Tigers with Bob Gibson
and Mickey Lolich as the starting
pitchers — one of the small mer-
chants was asked about the proper-
ties of the Yellow Peril. He was
obviously a certified expert; he
carried a long black stocking that
already held six balls and it was
only the third toning.
"Man," he said, “at's .'a rocket,
man. Takes off like a tennis ball.
You don’t ketch it first bounce,
you don’t ketch it at an.”
Statistical data on the Wednes-
day exhibition games is being
compiled and analyzed to deter-
mine whether 1)235 should be ap-
proved for use during the regular
season. If it is, Congress ought
to require the manufacturers to
print a warning on each ban in
red : “Caution— may be irritating to
skin and eyes. Keep out of reach
of Children. Do not store at tem-
peratures above 110 degrees F. Do
not puncture or Incinerate.”
NHL Standings
EAST DIVISION
W
L
T
Pts GF
GA
Boston
.37
16
17
91
257
180
Chicago
21
8
00
328
181
Detroit
IP
13
87
210
176
Montreal 35
18
15
87
226
177
New Tort ...
20
16
85
227
172
Toronto .....
28
13
7
213
218
WEST DIVISION
*SL LouIr ..
26
10
BO
211
168
Philadelphia
... 17
29
24
58
181
311
PilUbuTEh .
33
36
11
57
167
333
Minnesota .
33
32
52
203
245
Oakland
18
W
13
51
153
224
Los Angeles
..... 11
50
10
32
154
276
♦Clinched
division
title.
Taw day’s
Results
St. . Louts
4 rSabourln
a
Dennis
2 l.
group which Is backing Flood in
hi* effort to topple the long-stand-
ing reserve clause, said the ruling
means the 32-year-old outfielder
“has won the second of w«
lawsuit."
Moss said there was strong op-
position from the baseball attorneys
to an early trial date.
Flood, who brought smt after
being traded by the St. Louis Car-
dinals to the Philadelphia Phillies
for Blchie Allen, lost the “first in-
ning” in court. Judge Cooper refus-
ed an earlier request for a tempo-
rary Injunction against th<» reserve
system which would have made
him a free agent.
Flood has stated he does not
intend to play baseball again until
the suit is settled.
Kuhn Shelves Babbit Ball
NEW yoke; March 25 CAP/.—
The rabbit ball Is out of season,
effective today, in Florida and
Arisons, Baseball Commissioner
Ecwle Kuhn, announced frh«» dis-
continuing— on of use of the ex-
perimental X-I5 baseball— a soup-
ed-up version with five percent
more resilience.
The ultra-lively baseball, pre-
viously used in 22 Wednesday
games, was widely criticised as
hazardous after several pitchers
were low bridged by vicious line
drives.
Exhibition Baseball
To M day's Results
Los Angeles IS. Chicago (A) 4.
Minnesota, 4, Cincinnati a
Pittsburgh 7. St. Louis 3.
Washington 8. ■ City a
Boston 4, Houston 3.
Baltimore 6. Montreal I.
New York INI 4. New York tA) L
Philadelphia 5, Detroit 0.
Cleveland 10. Chicago 1N1 a
San Diego 15. Oakland a
California 3, Seattle 1.
Los Angeles 0 1 Kings' 8th straight loss
and 15th straight defeat by Bhiesi.
Minnesota 3 (WlUlMns, Goldsworthy),
Oakland 2 (Laughton. Muloin) (North
Stars' 22d Ue of season — ^behind record
set this year by Flyers).
Cooper Thinks About
Hanging: Up Gloves
LONDON, March 25 (UPD.— Brit-
ish heavyweight champion Henry
Cooper, who dedsioned jack Bodell
over 15 rounds last night to regain
his British heavyweight title,, to-
day ruled out all talk of a pos-
sible meeting with Joe Frazier
for the world heavyweight title.
Manager Jim Wicks said: “If
Cooper were 24 or 25 It would be a
different matter. But we wont
bother with Frazier now. Cooper
means more to me than all the
money in the wqrid.”
“The time incoming when I must
begin to think of retiring, everyone
knows I don’t have time on nay
side,” Cooper said. T think I can
get two more good pay days and
then decide to call it a day.”
Copper said he’ll fight jimmy
Richards in South Africa "if the
price is right” and would like a
crack at Spaniard Jose Urtain if he
wins the European title next month.
Associated Press.
LUCKY SEVEN — New Chapter, with Sandy Barclay up, scores a half-length victory
over Prince de Galles (second from right) in Irish Sweepstakes Lincoln Handicap.
Laver, Okker,
Gonzales Win
In S. Africa
JOBANNESBDRGH, March 25
lUPi). — The stars made their bow
today on the second day of the
South African Open formis cham-
pionship at Ellis Park with Rod
Laver, top-seeded in the men's
singles, defeating fellow Australian
Peter Doemer, 6-2, 6-2, 6-2.
AU the seeded players in men's
singles had byes in the first round
of the two-week tournament which
began yesterday.
Holland’s Tom Okker, second-
seeded in the men's singles, swept
past local player Quentin Preto-
rius, 6-1, 6-2, 6-1, and Pancho
Gonzales of Los Angeles, the third
seed, ousted South African Peter
Mors, 6-3, fl-3, 6-2.
la other matrbes today, Nikki Pllic.
Yugoslavia, beat Byron Bertram. South
Africa, 6-1. 6-2. 6-3; Rover Taylor. Enc-
lud, beat Sum Meyerson. South Africa.
6-3. 6-1. 6-1; Graham SUlwell. Britain,
beat Richard Hawkes, New Zealand. 6-1,
6-4, 6-3; Harold KLsenbrolch. West Ger-
many. beat F. Hesunes. Holland, 6-3,
6-3. B-l; BUI Bowrey. Australia, beat
Alan McDonald. Australia. 6-6, 6-3, 6-2;
Alvin Gardiner. Australis, beat Rohan
Summers. South Africa. 6-8. 4-6, 6-2, 8-6,
6-3; In the women's singles, top-seeded
Margaret Court of Australia, beat Kay
Boshoff. South Africa* 6-0, Judy
Dalton Tegart. Australia, beat Estelle
Dell&r. south Africa. 6-2, 6-1; Alice Tym,
Peoria. HI., beat X McDonald.
6-6. 6-0. Laura Roussou, South
Africa, beat Helen Kayaer. Australia.
6-0, 6-0; Kerry McItIDf, Australia, beat
L Cnypers. South Africa, 6-3. 6-0; Ann
Jones. Britain, beat A. Maden. South
Africa, 6-0, 6-2; Rosemary Casals, Ban
Prnndsco. beat Annette Botha, South
Africa. 6-0. 6-2; Virginia Wade. Britain,
beat Helolse Burger, South Africa. 6>0,
6-4; Karen Krantake, Australia, beat V.
Oosterhulzen, South Africa, 6-3. 6-3.
Yachtbuilder Morgan Chases a 12-Meter Dream
By Robert Lipsyte
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla, March
25 (NYTK— 'Tm 40 years old. I’ve
worked my tan off, I haven’t had a
vacation since I * got married In
1958,” said Charles E. Morgan jr.
“Why am I doing this thing? Why
dote a man build a company or
race a Ferrari? It’s kind of an
American thing to do, to do some-
thing you really want to do, some-
thing that might not contribute to
the sum total of significant human
the 12-meter world, yet. Morgan
is on his feet, pulling loose-leaf
books out of cases, 1962, 1963, 1964
. . . Morgan has been building 12-
meter yachts in his head for years.
Tn 1962, then known primarily
as a saflmaker, Morgan crewed an
Columbia, trimming main-sheet and
taking notes on the performance
of his own sails. When Columbia
was eliminated from the America's
Cup trials, the designer, Olxn
Stephens, said, “Charley, 1 think
it's been a most instructive sum-
knowledge— hell, what does when > mer _» Ashamed that his own feel-
you break it down?— something that
lets you fulfill your wildest dream.”
For Morgan, a new millionaire
in" the custom-yacht business, the
tags were less positive t h a n Steph-
en's, Morgan began sketching a
boat he would call Heritage. Hos-
pitalized with tuberculosis later
wildest dream began when he was that summer, he had time.
a boat-crazy boy in Tampa, sailing
homemade boats made of sugar
and lettuce crates. The
dream wHL become a public specta-
cle late next month when Heritage,
a 12-meter yacht he designed, built
and bankrolled, will slip into the
water and make her way toward
the America’s Cup trials at New-
port with Morgan at the helm.
At the moment, however, Heritage's
hull is a wooden skeleton in one
of Morgan’s concrete construction
sheds here, and her crew has yet
to be assembled.
Morgan is a rangy, square-jawed
six-footer who throws off words
in a fast drawl. Yes, he acknow-
ledges his reputation as a builder
of hot ocean-going racers; true,
his naTnp doesn't mean too much in
Revolutionary Design
In the next eight years, as his
sail business Increased, then be-
came secondary to his custom-yacht
company. Morgan continued sketch-
ing, making models, organizing
syndicates of men with money to
back him. But the plans always
collapsed— often because no one
wanted to risk cash after taxes
against Stephens, the titan of the
Twelves, the man who kept say-
ing there was nothing new In boat
building, then turned around to
unveil a revolutionary design.
Two years ago, Stephens spon-
sored Morgan's membership in the
New York Yacht Club, a prere-
quisite for Cup competition. Last
year, the Beatrice Poods Company,
a Chicago-based conglomerate, ac-
quired the Morgan Yacht Corpora-
tion. Suddenly, Morgan had sev-
eral million dollars. He budgeted
$750,000 for Heritage, dusted off
his notebooks, and plunged ahead.
There was no time, he said, to
organize a syndicate first- He
hoped others would came in, but
so far nobody has.
“In the early developmental
stages there's a certain advantage
In just one man giving the orders,"
said Morgan, “but I’ve missed the
Intellectual stimulation of working
with others, as you would with the
owner of a custom yacht. I've been
locked up with my own thoughts
for so long. It's getting better now.
Just recently we've been selecting
the afterguard, and more and mare
crew members are dropping by and
adding their thoughts.”
Morgan is surprisingly relaxed
about displaying the unfinished
boat. Stephens once actually
launched a 12-meter with some
of its newer features shrouded. But
Morgan shrugs. “The die is cast by
now, everyone's committed to his
own boat."
A Beal Slugfest
Everyone includes Stephens, who
Is building a new boat; a syndicate
that bought and is modifying; In-
trepid. Stephens's previous winner,
n-wri French and Australian chal-
lengers. One American and one
foreign boat will emerge from a
■g limm er of trials to race for the
Cup.
T see this as a real slugfest be-
tween Oita's new boat, ours if It’s
worth a hoot, and you cant count
Intrepid out,” said Morgan. “I
have an uncanny feeling that Oita
has done something particularly
different from Intrepid this time
and that if you accept Intrepid as
the current norm, Oita’s boat will
be mare radical than mine. One of
us has got to be wrong.”
Intrepid has winches below decks
with crewmen standing In holes to
cut down wind resistance. Morgan
says that Heritage will also have
winches below decks, but different
winches; Basically, however. Heri-
tage will be patterned after In-
trepid . According to Morgan, Heri-
tage will be made of western red
cedar and spruce, with ash frames
instead of the more common oak.
It will weigh about 73,000 pounds,
with 53,000 pounds of lead, a water-
line of more than 48 feet, and 1,750
square feet of sail. Its difference
from other boats will be in Mor-
gan's refinement of the 12-meter
equation rather than any single
radical feature.
“It's all just another way of
measuring yourself,” said Morgan.
“Competitive men always want to
know how big they are in relation
to others, how they can periorm.
Dollars are a way of keeping score,
there may be other means in a
more mature society. Why this?
There's damn little you can justify
outside of wanting to keep on
breathing.”
New Chapter Survives Foul Claim 9
Wins Irish Siveeps Lincoln Cap
DONCASTER, England, March 25 (UFI>.— New Chapter, with
Sandy Barclay in. the saddle, singed in the final yards today to
outgame favored Prince de Galles and win the £9,470 ($22,628)
Irish Sweepstakes Lincoln Handicap. The winner then had to
survive a foul claim by Lester Piggott, who rode the favorite.
New Chapter won by a half length from Prince de Galles,
which was 9-4 in the betting. Brookway (100-1 1 was third, another
half-length back. The winner paid 100-9.
Twenty-three horses went to the post for the mile race. Prince
de Galles and New Chapter moved out of the pack two furlongs
from home. There was a lot of bumping before Barclay forged ahead
in the final 100 yards.
New Chapter’s owner, Mr. Constantin Goulandrls, a Greek
shipping magnate, had to wait for ten anxious minutes before the
stewards overruled the objection. Their decision gave Mr. Goulandrls
the first prize of £6,428 ($15,430>.
The holder of the Sweeps winning ticket collect £50,000 ($120,-
OQO). Second Is worth £20,000 i$48,000j and third £10,000 ($24,000).
Of Pro Track Tour Signees
AAV Launches 6 Investigation s
By Neil Amdui
NEW YORK, torch 25 £NYT). —
Norman Tate made the cover of
Track and Field News this month
for the first time ta his athletic
career. His name also popped up on
page 19 of a stock prospectus far a
professional track organization.
The Amateur Athletic Union had
no objections to Tate's image as the
cover boy for the sport’s statistical
table, since he won long jump and
triple jump titles at the recent Na-
tional indoor championships. But
his presence, with 22 other ath-
letes, in the 26-page offering cir-
cular of World Sports Promotions.
Inc., of Los Angeles has prompted
an "investigation" by the AAU into
a sensitive area of amateur ath-
letics, “capitalization on athletic
fame.”
“We’re not prepared to make any
disclosures as to what wete doing,"
Oil an Cassell, the track and field
administrator for the AAU. said
yesterday. “But an Investigation is
under way and if any athletes have
actually signed a contract or given
a company the right to use their
names, they may be professionals
and Ineligible for competition ta
AAU -sanctioned meets.”
An energetic 28-year-old Los An-
geles attorney, A1 SchaOau, Is at-
tempting to finance the latest pro
venture, a 24-meet summer tour,
with the sale of 3 00 IKK) shares of
common stock, at $5 per share,
available only to residents of Cali-
fornia. The first two professional
meets ta the series are listed ta the
prospectus for May 23 In the Los
Angeles Coliseum and May 24 ta
Balboa Stadium, San Diego.
Scare Tactics
Confusion began over eligibility
last week. Several athletes men-
tioned in the prospectus received
letters saying they were being sus-
pended, effective March 12, for their
affiliation with the professionals. A
subsequent letter rescinded the sus-
pension and the athletes competed
in an amateur meet on the West
Coast.
“I don’t know what's going on,”
said the 28-year-old Tate, who
teaches at Bronx Community Col-
lege. “I signed an agreement with
the pros last year, not a contract,
and I haven't accepted any money
from them. Z don't know whether
Neither Rain nor Dust nor Stonings Stay the African Safari
KAMPALA, Uganda, March 25 1 rally P™*** 0 leave
<UFH.— Ithegan as a mildly In- chickens and goats dead. Tbrir
teresttag joke 18 years ago ^ ^
celebrate Queen Elizabeth's corona- J drivers badly injured,
tion. Today the East African
Safari is recognized as one of the
toughest motoring tests in the
Current overseas favorites are
Poland's Sob tesla w Zasada ta a
Porsche 91 IS, Finland's Rauno Al-
tonen in a Ford Capri and Ger-
many’s Schuller ta a works-
toust
• W EffnPW DIVISION
{taw* 43 S3 J73 —
ywtlaVM 41 ® AM li/I
5?“-.;. MM JM -4 -
— SB 36 414 * W
TugMI/;.;.... M » .493 6
•dtaehtti AvidoB.titb.
T nss i iy* s Ken Ha
Utr cy«rs« si, not hk
, M «. lAkawaa IT),
i*» (Boons a. a. Boatier it),
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world.
Ninety-seven cars, nore than -year -- m dur .
a child of them Japanese, are en-j speed of 70 m.pta. u
tend in this year* rally. Tomor-
row they will begin their 3,200-
wtip (4,120 km.! Journey from this
tittle capital in Central Africa.
The obstacles and hazards are
unique in rallying. Sweden’s Erik
Cari&son once dashed Ws hopes
n gakmf go nntbeaj — and now has
given up entering. Others have
been knocked out variously by
kebra, large antelope or rhino.
Irate villagers regularly hurl
XootiMLU-staa rocks at windshields,
desperate because weeks of pre-
If it rains, hundreds * “5i2SK
w-om* anklft-deeo slush. If , ,
Experts look again to the local
heroes— a collection of farmers'
become ankle-deep slush
huge, enveloping clouds of dust
blind contestants — expected this
to mn ta+jdp an average
tag the four-day event.
“It’s a race now. not a rally. It’s
crazy," complained one veteran
two-time winner, Vic Preston, who
has decided to skip the event this
year.
Britain’s Stirling Moss saw his
chances fade one y®* 1 Ji®
lost his way ta the maze of country
lanes.
. several actually believe some
kind of spell, which year after
year awards the top trophy to a
Inca!, ffinnnt be broken-
ffns, motorcycle enthusiasts and
! garage hands-— as the likeliest wta-
'aers. They include tost year’s
victors,. Robin Efllyar and Jock
Atrri, in a Ford Capri. Jack El-
moniaa and Pat Neylan ta a Dat-
sun 1690.
They are favorably placed at the
bread of the field— lots are drawn
after seeding based cm results of
the previous year's rallies— and
will not have to head off the dust
or contend with churned up
tracks.
AH previous safaris have started
In Nairobi* capital of Kenya-
Both Uganda and Tanzania have
pressed to have the start moved
away from Nairobi, T anzania ban-
ned the safari last year, forbidding
its drivers from competing because
ftht» organizers had not moved the
start to-Dar es Salaam, the Tan-
zanian capital.
A year ago, the organizers ac-
cepted a Uganda government " pro-
posal that the 1970 safari start and
finish should be ta Kampa la, and
Tanzania now has lifted its ban.
But Is was too late to rearrange
the safari route, which will be
limited to Uganda and Kenya this
year.
The route runs west from Kam-
pala to Kabale, near the Congo
and Uganda borders, and north to
skirt the 17,000-foot Ruwenzori
Mountains (the mountains of the
moon), before turning east to
Kampala. The driven then make
». circuit Of 16,000-foot Mount Kenya
before dropping to the Indian
Ocean coast, where they turn In-
land again over a different route
back to Nairobi and the finish at
Kampala.
There are four entries from Tan-
zania, and these include a formi-
dable team in a Peugeot 504 In-
jection— Bert flhankland and Chris
Rothwgll, winners twice before In a
Peugeot.
Japanese cars entered number no
less than 38 out of the total 97,
and 31 of these are Dateuns, rep-
resenting the heaviest bid yet by
the Nissan Motor Company.
French cars number 16, most of
than Peugects, and the German
entries Include the works-entered
Ford (Cologne) C&pris.
The lost event was typically wet.
Only seven from a field of 90 re-
turned— many entrants were firmly
stuck ta the mud toward the last
the AAU is trying to scare us, but
it’s going to be hard to keep the
athletes away from pro track if it’s
legitimate.”
Amateur rules are explicit over
commercialization. Article 54 states
that "capitalization on athletic
fame for use of one’s name to ad-
vertise, recommend, or promote the
sale of goods or apparatus to any
person, firm, manufacturer or
agent by accepting compensation
directly or Indirectly for using the
goods or apparatus of any person,
firm, manufacturer or agent"
Cassell, a former athlete, said the
AAU had no objection to athletes
signing professional contracts.
“Your job is to protect the amateur
athlete,” Cassell said. "We’re just
trying to determine what their
status is, not to deny them their
livelihood”
Jim Hines Signs
LOS ANGELES, March 25 CU PD.
— Jim Hines, Olympic 100-meter
gold medalist at Mexico City and
world record holder in the 100-
meter and 100- yard dash, yester-
day signed a five-year professional
track contract with World Sports
Promotions Inc.
A1 Schallau, president of World
Sports, said Hines will run ta all
of the organizations first 16 track
and field meets of 1970 before re-
porting to the training camp of the
Miami Dolphins of the National
Football League. High hurdlers
Richmond Flowers of the Dallas
Cowboys and Don Shy of New Or-
leans also have signed for the tour.
Pape 15
Russian Six
Trounces
Poland, 11-0
Czechs Take 2d in
World Ice Hockey
STOCKHOLM. March 25 (Reu-
ters!.— Russia and Czechoslovakia
warmed up for their return clash
on Rrlday with comfortable eighth-
round victories today at the world
ice hockey championships.
The Russians, resting several of
their veterans, routed Poland, 11-0,
while Czechoslovakia coasted to a
7-3 victory over East Germany.
Russia's triumph boosted their
first-place margin to three petals.
The Czechoslovaks, whose vic-
tory moved them into second place,
took a 4-0 lead within 2S minutes
and then cosed off. They still
showed the after-effects of the
hard-fought match against Sweden
lost night which resulted In a 2-2
draw.
The Czechs started fast and
forced the East Gormans to chnr.re
their goalkeeper. Kl&use Hire he
replaced Dieter Puerwhel after
eight minutes of the first period,
when the Czechs were leading. 3-0.
In the second period (he Ger-
mans managed to match the
Czechs at one goal apiece and in
the last period the lax Czechs al-
lowed two more goals but were
never in dancer. Vaclav Nedo*
mansky scored a hat-trick for
Czechoslovakia.
The Soviet victory was the fifth
shut-out of the 17-day, 3C-gaxr.e
tournament and the second for the
Russians, who beat Poland, 7-0. tn
the first game on March 17.
Alexander Maltsev, a young Rus-
sian forward star, was elected best
player of the game. Ho scored
twice as did Vladimir Shadrlru
playing bis first game of the tour-
nament. Boris MlrhnLlov and Vic-
tor Polupnnov.
Maltsev kept the top spot In tha
individual scoring statistics with a
total of 18 points, two ahead of
Nedomnnsky.
Sweden, idle today, plays Finland
ta tomorrow's only contest with a
chance to regain a second-place
tie.
SUtuUnc Of the Tran*
G XV T L GF GA Pts
1. RUMlB a 7 Q 1 60 0 14
3. Csechoslof . „ a S 1 3 43 3*» It
3. Sweden ......... 7 G 1 I 33 14 It
4. Finland - 7 4 0 S 2fl 39 «
5. Bast Get 8 0 1 7 11 4G 1
a. Poland 8 0 17 8 as l
Lanier Indicates
NBA Preference,
Bullets Sign No- 1
NEW YORK, March 25 CAP'.—
The National Basketball Association
appeared almost certain to sign
all-America Bob Lanier and is
hopeful of luring Pistol Pete Mara-
vich from the American Basketball
Association. However, the ABA
continued to add to Its impressive
list of college signees yesterday.
The latest Into the ABA fold was
Howard Wright, a 6-foot-2 guard
from Austin Peay, a seventh round
selection of the Kentucky Colonels.
Wright was a No. 2 choice of the
New York Knlcks.
Bobby Croft, a 6-10 center from
Tennessee, also signed yesterday
with the Colonels. The NBA signed
a No. l choice as George Johnson,
a 7-foot center from Stephen F.
Austin, agreed to terms with the
Baltimore Bullets.
In Buffalo. N.Y., the Associated
Press learned that Lanier, the 6-11,
No. 1 draft pick of the Detroit
Pistons, will sign a SI .5-million,
five-year pact with that NBA club
today.
Mara rich, the Louisiana State
All-American who is the highest
scorer ta major college history, ap-
peared to be headed for the ABA
Carolina Cougars until the Atlanta
Hawks of the rival NBA grabbed
him ta the draft.
“XI we didn't feel we had a good
chance of getting him, we wouldn't
have drafted him,” said Richie
Guerin, coach of the Hawks.
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Page 16
INTERNATIONAL HERALD TREBCSE, THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1970
* *
Art Bnehwald
Hail Mediocrity
Bnehwald
■WASHINGTON.— There seems
** to be no end to the Judge
Carswell debate. The main
charges against the jurist axe
that he wasn't a very outstand-
ing judge or the federal bench.
To support these charges.
Carswell opponents maintain
that be was reversed by 59 per-
cent on all his
decisions, a rec-
ord that few
federal Judges
can equal.
The sad part
of it all is that
the men de-
fending Judge
Carswell arc
not saying that
Judge Carswell
is a superior
person, but arc supporting him
on the grounds that it is about
time we had a mediocre judge
on the Supreme Court.
Sen. Roman Hruska said at a
news conference: "There are
lots of mediocre judges and
people and lawyers. They are
entitled to a little representa-
tion. aren't they?"
And Sen. Russell Long, an-
other Carswell defender, has
said the United States needs ;t
"B" student or a "C" student
instead of an “A" student on
the Supreme Court.
It came as no surprise to me
when I was invited to attend
the opening of the national
headquarters of the "Society
for a Mediocre America.”
It was located in a very sec-
ond-rate neighborhood, and
after walking two flights up. I
found myself in a dull room
where volunteers were at work
sending out folders in support
of Judge Carswell. On the
walls were large posters of the
judge, which read: "Ask the
impossible and hell do the
ordinary.”
Mr. Simon Listless, the ex-
ecutive director ol the "Society
for a Mediocre America," said:
“I'm so glad you got your in-
vitation- Our volunteers are a
very unexceptional group, and 1
believe they got the dates all
loused up. Everyone who was
sent an invitation received it
for a different date."
“How are things going?" I
asked.
"All right. I guess, or course,
we can't expect much with the
inadequate people we have
working here. "
"What are you trying to do
with your society?"
“We're trying to organize the
mediocre people in America to
support Judge Caswell We feel
that they should be represented
on the Supreme Court. Sen.
Hraskn. gave us the Idea, and
we re running with it. There
are a lot more mediocre people
in the United States than any-
one wants' to admit."
“But why Judge Carswell?”
“Well for one thing; he's
known nationally as an unex-
ceptional judge, and he’s con-
tinually done nothing to make
himself noteworthy in the legal
profession. Carswell has an
endless list of unremarkable
qualities, and he represents
everything that we stand for:
sincerity, honesty and medi-
ocrity.”
“Why are they fighting his
appointment if he's all you say
he is?"
$280,000 for a Stamp
TUEtf YOBS. March 25 OTPI).— The world's rarest stamp,
' printed in British Guiana in lffijfi, was sold last night to
a syndicate of Pennsylvania businessmen who bid $280,000
for It to set a world philatelic auction record.
"It won't just sit in the bank." said Irwin Wineberg. senior
partner of Irwin Wlneberg Rarities, Ltd., of Wilkes Bane, Fa.
“We will look at It periodically."
The octagonal, reddish stamp— which carries the picture
of a wooden sailing ship on its l-l '4-by-l -inch face— is the
only one of Its kind in the world. Mr. Wineberg, who has
been a stamp collector for 25 years, called his investment
‘Very sound.”
There was spirited early bidding for the stamp, which
last sold for $50,000, but collectors dropped oat quickly when
Mr. Wlneberg kept going up. The syndicate also bought the
UjS. 24-cent upside-down airplane stamp for $34,000. the second
highest price of the night at the auction in the Waldorf Astoria,
ballroom.
The British Guiana magenta has had six owners since it
was discovered by a teen-ager in 1873. The stamp has been
in vaults most of the time. It was last acquired in 1933 by
an Australian living in the United States, who did not wish
to be identified.
The canceled magenta stamp was made by local printers
In 1856 at the request of the English postmaster when a ship-
ment of stamps from England failed to reach the colony of
British Guiana, now the independent Guyana, in northeast
South America.
Printed In handset type, the stamp contains the motto
Associated Press.
The British Guiana stamp.
“Damus perimus que vlcisslm” (We give and we seek in
return*.
Pound among family papers by teen-ager L. Vernon
Vaughan in 1873, the stamp was sold for six shillings (then
about 51 -50*.
PEOPLE: t Ren f er!ng
I nto Caesor
Russian Writer Hits Soviet Way of Death
Hearken, if you will, to the
story of a Chicago clergyman
who deducted $450 from bis
1970 income-tax return as a
"legitimate business expense”
for one of those turn-around
collars. Questioned by his local
tax examiner, the padre readily
admitted to -an honest mistake.
“He explained to the tax au-
thorities.” reports th. Daily
Telegraph, “that the collar cost
only $4.50 and that he had mis-
placed the decimal point in
typing the return,” a clerical
error as it were. .The explana-
tion was accepted and he readily
agreed to pay the additional tax
due plus 6 percent Interest.”
However — and here's the poi-
gnant part— "an auditor later
checked the clergyman's .tax
returns for the previous three
“■•rs and found the same
‘honest mistake* on each one.”
The clergyman was subsequently
ordered to pay .back taxes,
interest and a 50 percent penalty
for fraud. 'A shocking story,
perhaps, but not without its
saving grace. Faced with in-
controvertible evidence of his
delinquency, the clergyman, we
understand, smiled upon his
malefactors in the best tradi-
tion. dug up the scratch, and
murmured: “Tax voblscum.")
AP.
OPERA SOAP — Scrubbing
up for a Monday night ap-
pearance at Covent Gar-
den in Alban Berg's “Woz-
zeck" is 7-year-old singer
Nigel Saxton-Howo, who
was fairly satisfied wife
his performance bat re-
gretted missing “Softly.
Softly.” his favorite TV
program.
Japanese Censor
Two Movies for
Expo 70 Viewing
OSAKA. Japan. March 25
(Reuters'.— Two films— one each
from Sweden aud Luxembourg-
scheduled to be shown at the
world exposition here next
month have been censored by
the Osaka customs office on
grounds of obscenity.
The films are "I Am Curious
(Yellow*", produced and direct-
ed by Vilgot Sjoman of Sweden,
and “More,” produced and
directed by Barbet Schroeder
of Luxembourg.
Officials of Expo 70 did not
say how many scenes had been
cut from the original version of
both films.
“There's a certain segment ol
America that is opposed to me-
diocrity in the courts. They
want their Supreme Court Jus-
tices to be "A” students, instead
of ''B - ' and "C" students.
“They can t stand to see a
falr-to-middling person appoint-
ed by the President of the
United States. They can't toler-
ate people who are no great
shakes at their jobs."
“Have you been getting a
good response to your Judge
Carswell campaign?”
“Being a mediocre society we
don't expect too much. We pre-
fer to muddle along and hope
our message gets through."
“And what is your message?”
"Carswell should be confirmed
for the Supreme Court if for
no other reason than he's the
second-best man for the job.”
By Harry Trimborn
jV| O S C O W.— The dead are
treated with contempt and
their grieving survivors axe
fleeced of every kopeck that
grasping funeral officials can
extract.
Vandals and the thoughtless
dance on graves, steal flowers
from funeral wreaths and dese-
crate gravestones. Gravediggers
hold out their hand lor pay-
ment before they will turn a
shovelful of earth.
Drunken employees at
morgues, hospitals and funeral
homes insult the mourners who
come to claim the dead.
Even that final ride to the
cemetery becomes a grim cari-
cature of a Keystone Kops
chase as hearse drivers race
through the streets to complete
their chores.
And the authorities couldn't
care less.
Such is the grim and bizarre
picture of the funeral business
in the Soviet Union. It comes
not from some disgruntled dis-
sident intellectual, but from
Anatoly Markusha. an estab-
lishment writer for the pres-
tigious weekly Literary Gazette.
Writing with obvious white-
hot anger. Mr. Markusha de-
mands an end to graveside
profiteering and swift and se-
vere punishment for those who
prey on the ^Tief of mourners.
Mr. Markusha declared: "Let
no written explanation (from
government officials) arrive at
the editorial board (of the
Literary Gazette! in reply to
my article ... Let action be
started now”
He called for establishment
of an agency that would handle
all arrangements for funerals,
from the moment of death to
the placing of the gravestone.
Survivors now must make
these arrangements themselves.
They must personally secure the
death certificate, purchase the
coffin, arrange for the burial
and attend to the innumerable
other chores.
And in the Soviet Union it is
not just a matter of picking
up a telephone to make the
arrangements. Frequently it
entails waiting in line to fulfill
the requirements of red tape.
Mr. Markusha offers this
description of the final Journey
of the dead:
“Relatives of the dead are
received in a hospital morgue by
a man usually slightly drunk
who does not even pretend to
show sympathy. He immediately
starts to extort money from
these people, stunned with grief,
to prepare the body for burial
"... He can do anything the
survivors desire. Only they must
pay. Pay in cash as much as
he’ thinks he can get.”
Mr. Markusha notes there are
established prices for burial ser-
vices. but asks rhetorically :
"Who will ask about established
tariff prices at such a moment?
They pay without argument."
At the funeral bureau where
the arrangements are complet-
ed the employees are "rude and
cheat people without any
sliame." The employees know
that the mourner "will not
leave, however rudely he will be
treated.”
The body is transported to
the cemetery by drivers and
hearses from special automobile
stations set aside for the pur-
pose. Here again the mourners
are met with rudeness, said Mr.
Markusha.
“The driver starts hurrying
the mourners from the moment
he appears at the threshold”
and "speeds across the city so
that one cannot realize whether
he is going to a funeral or a
fire.”
When the funeral cortege
reaches the cemetery, “im-
mediately bargaining starts,
shamefully and secretly." Mr.
Markusha notes that no pay-
ments should be made at that
lime, yet the mourners are
dunned for under-the-table pay-
offs.
"The mourners pay for the
gravesite. pay for digging the
grave. The prices are fixed by
profiteers and are absolutely
uncontrolled.”
After the body has been
lowered into the grave, the trou-
bles continue. There is hag-
gling over whether the family
wants a fence around the grave
and over the type and size of
the gravestone.
If the family insist on stick-
ing to the relatively low
"official" prices, they may be
forced to wait for months—
sometimes years, if they agree
to pay the “unofficial” prices—
usually double— the fence or
gravestone will be in place in
three days.
Even after the last burial
chore has been completed, the
family has cause for concern.
The desecration of graves has
become a serious problem. The
authorities denounce such ac-
tivity and adppt resolutions
promising to take action against
the desecrators. “But the
trouble is that nothing happens.
The resolutions are not carried
out." Ml*. Markusha said.
He insists his protest is to
benefit the living. "A negligent
attitude to the memory of pre-
decessors. the agitation of the
marketplace around funerals,
graves and monuments is in-
humane. It causes damage to
the living, not the dead. Such
negligence corrupts young
people, generates cynicism. This
cannot be tolerated.”
SETTING: The sun, on the
British Empire, as personified
by CoL Eric Hefford. who for
the past decade has made a
career of organizing independ-
ence-day celebrations for Tan-
zania, Sierra Leone. Jamaica,
Malta. Guyana. Barbados and
Mauritius. This year, CoL Hef-
ford is arranging the centenary
party of the Yorkshire steel
community of Rotherham. DIS-
SOLVED: The marriage of
Patty Duke. 23, to TV director
Harry Falk, her husband for
four years. A Santa Monica
court also granted the actress
permission to resume her
maiden name. Anne Marie' Pat-
ricia Duke. EN ROUTE : Ki ng
Frederick XX, Queen Ingrid and
Princess Benedikte of Den mar k,
to Kenya for a week-long pho-
tographic safari. RECONCILED:
Set designer Togo Esben and
press secretary Henning Ditlev,
both of Copenhagen's Ny Scala
theater, after a duel at 48 paces
with ancient cavalry pistols.
Esben had challenged Ditlev
after the latter had left his
name off the rough draft of a
new program. One pistol mis-
fired, the other was way wide
of the mark, and a bottle of
champagne sealed the recon-
ciliation.
to Le Monde, is offering
Oriental repast in the opulent
style of 16 th-century China,
served on the rare dlnucrwarc
of the era and comprhlng log
dishes. Including slugs’ tails
d la grand mandarin and mouse
thighs cn brochette. Eating
time: two days. Cost $909,
service compris.
a * • : ••
!r
It
The decline of gastronomy
(contl: Union of Soviet So-
cialist Republics Patent No.
3.499.379 was granted last week
to Alexander Xesneyanov for a
process In which “a stream of
liquid protein is cooled into
drops that become granules.
The granules are sprayed with
a tanning agent, and dye and
flavoring are added to make
caviar." Die gunk, we hear.- is
to be test-marketed' in SaUruu.
Calif., under the trade, name
“Tannery Roe."
♦ * *
<£ Las Angeles Tines
Left over from last week's
menu is the Chinese meal to
end all Chinese meals. A res-
taurant in Bangkok, according
In a similar state of deterio-
ration, it would seem. , fa' the
art of dinner -table - tonversa-
tion. The follow ing/ropartpe,
for example, was lifted verba-
tim at Paris's Fearf’fliver res-
taurant from a colloquy be-
tween a married couple of long
standing:
Wife: "Listen. Vm : getting
just a little til ed of this place.
How come we always eat here?”
Husband: “Whaddaya mean,
always eat here? When was the
last time we ate here?”
Wife: The last time."
Husband: “It was like heir
—DICK ROE ABACK.
1 1.
if ‘
ANNOUNCEMENTS
DISCOl'NT up lo Xi'i an PERFUMES
Jk GIFTS at EIFFEL SHOPPING Across
HILTON and EIFFEL TOWM. ■ AW.
Sut i run. Paris Free Cognac with UUsad.
For healib. comfort, happiness
AMERICAN DIAPER SERVICE
la r home deliver)'. Si.-Cloud; 603-78-91.
INTERESTING. intellieem pen pal want-
ed. Write: Box 6.931. Herald. Pa Ms.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY. Mommy. Stay as
<fw ur you arc. Mirhael and Daddy.
MARIE BERX.UCHIA— Are you well.
M us know. Plr.ur come name.
Can resolve nil problems. Love Mom
AYN* KAXD ADMIRER SEEKS STUDENTS
OF OBJECTIVISM Virile: Riilh OES-
HEKTLR KliU-.i-l *!»>•«' 16. 41=3
ALLSCH W IL. StV 1TZERLAND
SERVICES
U. S. A.
TRANSFERRED TO NEW YORK?
Lrr Us h-lp 3 on a find a home In benutl-
fi:l -on i Item < 'onnrc: icuc Past coni mu: -
me 'r.iins lo New York. Low tnxe-. PINE
PUBLIC SCHOOLS. We specialize In
home.' i
or «. -.ecu fives, and their inmilics,
New Cimann. Greenwich. Dai lea.
Si, mi lord nnd WKl|K>rt
MABEL C. LAMB. Realtor
41 Chorrv Ml.. New Canaan. Conn.. U SA.
T.-lepbonc: I2u3i 066-L'ID?.
}U.vuw/Ma^C( i rcnlmcnt. vapor oaths.
PU>as.uil ourioundinct London 134 3438.
EDUCATION
ll'TIVE FKLNCll IN VArCRFSSOX
1ND1I HU Al. .UTMHVISI AI. COURSE
i or Encllrt— ncaLlng ndu’ir..
mm I.A.NGl'ES. — Jl.O-fn-tW.
A l-o ENGLISH and GERMAN.
FRENCH CONVERSATION Dy audio-visual
method ic:ncma. language laboratory'.
INTER -LAN GOES. 2a Rue Chateau-
b.- und. Paris-lit- Tot; BAL. 41-1)3.
TlH R COMPETITOR SPEAKS GERMAN.
You car. absorb ihe language in fo ur
«eefc- through FAST ABSORPTION.
F:ui i-ingUAEc teaching Burkhordt. •
S'uitrar: M>. Hotel International Tele-
piiore: 71 2t> 62.
W.inlrd ARABIC Tr«*on« a( ni) home.
Call. EAG 9-KU'-, P.lrlv
AUTOMOBILES
All European Care Tax Free, PAN CABS
l-SED CARS- leasing, rmials. shipping
U Ace CARNOT, PariMTc 33-02- T I
HI 1ST AN C. mi white liaru ion » tylinu-
i-r.. Original owner 23.uon mile:. K
nates At 2ui> Pan--.. .-24-70-21
Fl:i.I. <-J u«r departure MGC lljNM
lit ilc:- U S eMUTt model Tol.: S67-U2-2U.
Pare-. L-.T. 447.
jv*'-: (tl.DS I'*, deluxe sedan, nlr-condt-
Amrrlran plan-.--. 19.00U miles,
s'2.7nn Bor W.r.13. Herald. Paris.
FERRARI 2MI GTE. 2 61. verv Rood
■Hi-Ciint: prey. SJ.MKI. Pans.: 326-Ta-li.
££<iiHiiimiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiimiiiiiT]iiimmmmiiiiHiiiiiii!£
PUZZLED!
A number nf fine choices. Mr.
•?. stopped liis ad after 2d day.
He is still undecided as to which
one to choose.
HOLIDAYS AND TRAVEL
ESTORIL
FOR YEAR-ROUND SUN!
For an Alwayvperirrl holiday
discover our romantic beachex. delightful
scenery, flowers, festivals, fine hotels,
superb sen (nnd. casino, roulette, sports. . .
AND SUCH AN EXCITING CUXATE!
Your money, too. goes farther.
Write: Junta de Turismo. Estoril.
Portugal ... lor ail information.
ALGARVE, Soutb Portugal, marvelous
villa over sea. swimming-pool, terrace*,
guesthouses. 10 beds. maid, gardener,
monthly rentals excepted. July-August.
Box: 6.BM. Herald. Parts.
Mallorca—" el BosQrE." the unique
Mediterranean Health-Hydro resort. E\-
trnstec range of treatments for obesity,
rheumatism, asthma, circulatory dis-
orders etc., including underwater tuas-
utpe. Finnish sauna. Scottish showers.
Mu log baths, osteopathic manipula-
tion!.. massage. electrotherapy, mhala-
lonura gymnasium. Qualified die-
tician. products supplied by Us own
farm, none being cultivated with artifi-
cial fertilizers. English-speaking physl-
„ clans, osteopaths & naturopaths in at-
tendance. Write far broenure to: EL
BOSQUE. Ca He Mender Nunrr. a n. Pal-
ma d- Mallorca. Spain Tel.: 23 30 48.
ECONOMY WEEKLY JET FLIGHTS to
N America Apply: North American
Club 25 Hnymarkec. London. 6.W.I.
Tel.: 01-339 7310.
SPECIAL JET FLIGHTS to and feom
Europe / West Indies / North America.
4135 single; $180 round trip DAWN
TRAVEL. 102 Star Street. London. W.2,
Tel.: 01-723 4696
SPECIAL JET FLIGHTS ALL SUMMER.
Europe •U.JS.A. and Canada. S130 single.
SIK0 return SAPETRAV. 2S Biackstone
Road. London N.W.2
INDIA Overland. 5204. Regular trips. HT.
39 Land.'doerne Gardens. London. SWA
JET flight* to As from New York, return
*199. One wav siBa Bru-scU: 32.79.30.
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS
SITUATIONS WANTED
all-round multilingual exec
I'TTVE, dynamic. Belgian. 44. single.
Long-time selling marketing 'supply ex-
perience in Africa. Europe, with Inter-
national groups. Talent lor or ganizing
and coordinating. ALSO EXPERIENCED
IN market research: stall administra-
tion: Imports exports: shipping: cus-
toms procedures. Fluent English. French.
Portuguese, German. Dutch. Would like
to relocate overseas in cbmUroging post
lion. Please write to: Bo* 6J944
Herald, Paris.
FOR SALE & WANTED
AM ERIC .IN DISHWASHER, washing ma-
chine. drver. electric range, combina-
tion rndlo-record player CONSOLE.
624-26-91. Paris.
ANIMALS
ADORABLE SILVER lor poodle, male.
SWEET NATURE. BRED IN ENGLAND.
Sire Champion Cruft-: 5 months.
Phone: Bell. Parti. ELY. 32-06.
ANTIQUES
ANTIQVES- WHOLESALE warehouse. D.illy.
low cm prices. LIES. U Rue Roulettes.
Mom reu il Mo. Cr. -de-Chavaiix AVR.Oo-gj,
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
5= VKGENT NEED for a good bilinguals
= ifereury Conrinenlai, P.ue ■=
= Pans Tel.: XXX. S
WANTED LOW PRICED Hems Tor sale
bv mail 1i: Europe & Air lea. s-nd
:*;i tuple of cjt.rlpRiie & prices io: Bov
72.234. Herald. Paris
DAVE AS ADDRESS m Parw Tor your
biLMncv;. cimui|i .-Ely -.-•*> -s area. Phone
rails taken, mall forwarded, acting *.«
your reijrrsentauve. loler Smtit-
Pbllippc. 5 Rue d ‘Artel?. Parts-Re Tel.:
339-47-m Branch Oflico New York
city. Wall Street tire a
I3H ACHES partly wooded land border
ing O.S. higliwar. small creek Michi-
gan. U.SA investment growth. 331.5*10.
Write for (1st Investment, recreation,
farm properties. Declcet. Inc. Realtors.
11B Superior. Alma. Michigan, U s A.
41801.
YOUt LONDON OFFICE with our ad-
dress. phone service £l per weefc. W.E.
BA. 119 oxford SI- W1R1FA. Tel:
01-437 3063.
TO CEDE ART GALLERY. Be Si. -Louis,
roulti be also Used for antiques or art
object*. Call: Paris. DAN. gj^2
SEEKING AMERICAN CONTACTS. Bilin-
gual journalist translator. Interpreter
lEngltsh-Prenclii. good knowledge Ital-
ian. settling New York area May J.
seeks position. Former editor Prench
dally, long experience Middle East.
Salary open. Good references. Write to:
Jonas LEIBOVITZ, 2S Rue Fbg. Mont
mart re, Parn-Se
EXPERIENCED BILDiCVAL SECRETARY
at your disposal. Please telephone:
Pari*. 288-91-25: Francotse ToJedano.
AMERICAN FRENCH SECRETARY.
xhortiumd-fTpist. necks afternoon job.
P. 1.000 x fa, Wr.: Bos T2.3I7. Herald.
JOBS WANTED. Young couple with col-
lege degree* wish to see Europe for one
year. Husband ex-Nava 1 Officer. Box
6.949. Herald. Parks
Qr.4 LIFTED lornier U.S. Government
agency Administrative secretary, well
travelled, desires position In Italy.
Germany. Spain. Accurate typist. 35
w.p.m.. shorthand. Write: Bo* 6.953,
Herald. Part*
E.YECIT1VE ASSISTANT -P17BI C RELA-
TION .s. Three years professional ex-
perience International public relations,
excellent references, widely travelled,
good contacts ability 10 dealing with
people, well groomed, Swiss, female,
age 32. fluent English. German. French
plus good Spanish. Italian, willing re-
locate or travel: seeking responsible
position with international company or
PR agency. Write: Box 6.950. Herald.
Paris.
AMERICAN. 2S. seek? position in Bales
or Product loo Management with pro-
E resslve llrm In Europe. Experienced
1 Technical Sales Management, with
Master ol Aerospace Operations Man-
agement <fc Bachelor of industriu! Man-
agement degrees. Contact J. Kevin
Lfnn. Bos' 1405. 552 Bltburg EUel-
Flugplatt. Telephone: 1D6S6I-1 2188
weekdays.
URGENT. American male. 31. seeks any
position. Without UK work permit .
References or experience. Box 4.455,
H.T. 2.7 Of. Queen Sr.. London, W.C_2,
DUTCHMAN. 29. airline-steward. *ci-k*
interest inc portion on the ground or
in the air. French. German, English.
Weh e dura Ini Willing to travel or
be stationed al! over the world. Many
years oilier eyperirnce. Please a rile lo:
Box r,.s43. Herald. Pans.
B>. EE. Physics, warn graduate study
■ A business uge 33. aide experience m
mechanical. ■•bcinral engineering,
nianuioctiiring m« ns cement In UA and
abroad. Pliu-nt English, Persian. Turk-
ish S^elm miernational sales or oiaau-
im i urine m aua pcQienc with UB. com-
pany Ataflnblc lor imerriear in Eu-
roiw and Oh during May heme leave.
Write Box 6.942. Herald Parti.
ENGLtsn TEACHER. Filipino Clllien.
qualified, experienced, seek* teaching
position in Pari* a.-, soon as possible.
Wrlle: M SU1AXOA K. 9 Trizonion
St. Ka*n. Illoupolls ATHENS Greece
ATTORNEY — 5a iss and OJS c linen ship.
age 30. sedcs position with QMnngrznrot
potential, in Switzerland with Amer-
ican or Struts lirm. 3 1-2 years broad
coroorate jaw exn*Tience with billion
dollar tn an ui’aet tiring corporation. New
Y'oik bar: Enel loll. French. German:
New York based. Please write to: Box
G.S43. Herald. ParL).
SITUATION'S WANTED
EFROPEAN SALES MANAGER. Energetic
Dutchman. 38. ' experience technical
sales and management, seeks contact
with American or British company.
Please write to: Box 62. Herald. Paris.
SECRETARY-GIRL FRIDAY', 26, fluent
English. Preach. German: mother ton-
gue. Dutch, 2 year* with Parts bareau
American television company seeks po-
sition Amsterdam area. Preferably
Including travel. Beginning May. Refer-
•-ners Box 72.311 Herald. Parts.
BILIN'GCAL ENGLISH-FRENCH secretary,
stenogra pher-t y p tgt. seek* parc-time
work Write: Box 72.274. Herald. Paris.
YOUNG FRENCHMAN, apeak® fluent Eng-
lish seeks situation in American com-
mercial firm Has travelled widely in
U S.A Phone- 10-12. Paris: NOR. W-79.
FRENCH ACCOUNTANT, skilled In Amer.
icon accounting, seeks position. Mr.
Pouter, 76 Bid. Oroano. Paris <JSe).
HELP WANTED
MUTUAL FUND
MANAGERS
with crews
If you have sold MORE THAN ONE MIL-
LION DOLLARS net and are in the
mutual fund business more than three
years and are Interested In a future
with the fastest growing Real Estate
Fund la the World.
HELP WANTED
WORLDWIDE FINANCIAL COMPANY
SEEKS PROFESSIONAL REGIONAL
VICE-PRESIDENTS TO ORGANISE
SALES TEAMS IN AFRICA. MIDDLE
EAST AND FAR EAST. ONLY PRO-
FESSIONALS WITH FUND OR RE-
LATED EXPERIENCE NEED APPLY.
SALARY. OVERRIDES AND STOCK
TO SUCCESSFUL CAN DIDATES. C.V.
TO BOX 64U7, HERALD, PARIS.
Replacements in American firms, very
good SECRETARIES. ENGLISH-FRENCH,
interesting salaries.
MINER VE “ "LMSB P .VS‘“'
Tel.: PAS. 81-69.
10S Rue SC-Laasre, Parts** i«th floor).
IMMEDIATE OPENING OPERA area, for
British or American secretary. 22-35.
EDgltih shorthand and typing, fluent
French appreciated. Paris: OPE. 30-82.
FRENCH CULTURAL association seeks
part-time secretary, English mother
tongue, good French. T.:Parls3LOB2-78.
*~GKNT. required young French girl.
URG
administrative employee. bilingual
French-Engllah Free Immediately. Ap-
ply: Herald Tribune, room 206.
GREYHOUND PARIS OFFICE requires
sborthand-typtit. Bn gJiah -Prench. Call:
Pan*. 770-86-49 or 86-30. Kst. 37.
SECRETARY WANTED. Must be experi-
enced. Speak English. German and
French, to be situated in Luxembourg
and Germany, prepared to LraveL Send
photo and full details: Box 0.956.
Herald, Parts.
SECRETARY bilingual Freueh-Engtiah for
American executive fashion ausineas.
C.V. J. J assert, 5 Rue Saint-Mem.
Parii-le
YOUNG, attractive. English speaking,
single girl lo demonstrate our product
la all military elub* throughout We«t.
ern Germany. Must have own car.
Salary tiuo.oo a week aud ear allow-
ance plus expenses. Must be willing
to travel. .(Sill: Frankfurt 669191, W.
Germany, for’ appointment.
' lIE OPENING Concorde area
ENC.TXEER. A & M. 29. specialist In pre-
cast system lor biUIdi
... - -ild mg Jndu-'try.
design and planning management. Eog-
iL-h spoken, seek* poaiuen offering
rapid promotion Prance and abroad.
Fr. BO.OW. Write: NICOLE. 13 Ave. du
Cioeher. 93 - NOISY-LE-sEC, France.
Doiedu ...
for American or British Secretary 25-35
years old. . Requirements fluent French-
Engltih shorthand typing, preferably
telex £ telephone experience. Pletue
apply only If fully qoaliiied. Call to:
073-18-66 or 53-90 or 95-05
ENGACEOXS. unmOdiaumesL sunas ei
dactyls* qualiOees bilingue. Rem place-
menls Boulogne. Heollly. Paris. Bust-
ness Aid. 073-53-37 .
ACCO.t tpLIS B CD FECV'CfT- ENGLISH Sec-
retary. excellent typist, required for
International law office. immediate
opening Write: Box 72.296, Herald.
REAL ESTATE HEPS. With ear. Training
given. Contact: WEyTWAY. 6 Frankfort .
30 Vuheler-Strasse. TeL: (0611) 290046.
Write: UNITED STATES OVERSEAS
MANAGEMENT CO..
Dade Commonwealth Bonding, 139 NT.
1st Streec ignite 5IS>. giving a full resume
ol your background. Ah Information
will be treated strictly conUdentUL
DOMESTIC SITUATIONS
SITUATIONS WANTED
ENGLISHMAN. Cambridge University.
b. Paris: 969-38-07.
re ek* an y legal job,
CHAUFFEUR, valet, butler, chef or yacht
steward. Danish, age 65, permanent
resident U-8- A . Languages: English,
German, Spanish, Italian and Portu-
guese, excellent references and experi-
ence. free to travel- Mr. Erik Andersen,
Heimer Sogaardsaliee 4, 2770 Kaatrup.
Denmark Phone; Denmark 01-503493.
COUPLE SCANDINAVIAN, permanent
rwadentg 0.5 -A . age 46. A-l Gourmet
Cook, chauffeur, valet, butler, excellent
reference* and experience, languages:
English. German, Spanish, Italian and
Portuguese, free to travel. Mr. Erik
Andersen. Heimer Sojraardsallee 4. 2770
Kaatrup. Denmark. Phone: DENMARK
0 1-50349 3.
chauffeur. 36 years, checkable refer*
ences. seeks position part-time or mtl-
tlmr. Write: MO RATO. 4 Roe Murillo.
Parfs-8e.
AU-PAIRS. MOTHER’S HELPS, NANNIES
for Eruope. Baxter’s Agency. Peter,
borough. England TeL: 62744.
AMERICAN -BABY SITTER AVAILABLE.
Call: 754-35-70.
HELP WANTED
At - pair JOB: must like children and
b« help/uL Nice room, good wages, pos-
sibility to take lesson*. P. SCSWOB,
5 Rue aes Card! cm, CB-1207. Genera.
TeL: 3X-CS-72,
MOTHER’S HELPER Munich. 3 children
8 and 5. and infant. Room and Board.
50 DM per week. Write: Mrs. Chuuk.
339 -Cl. Peri- Porst, 8 Mimchcn 90. Ger-
AMErIcAN OFFICER desires Uve-ln
hQosekeeper tor motherless home with
care or Uro children. Possibility ot
returning to the UB.. Telephone: 06371.
<1676 (Germanyi.
THE A9DBASFADOR of the United Slates
in Luxembourg seeks for hi* residence
highly qualified cook and butler ipre-
lerably couple i. serious references re-
fluired. Contact: Ufa. Embassy. 33 Bid.
Emmanuel Servals, Luxembourg. Tel.:
40 123 for interview.
C£. diplomatic family needs au-palr lor
Moscow bwinruag May or June /driv-
ing tram Munich i . s boy*: 3 year* +
infant. Full resume, photo. Box 6.939.
-Herxld. Paris.
TO LET
SEAL ESTATE
PARIS ANS SUBURBS
PLACE CTJCHY. 2 nice rooms, furnished,
all comfort, phone. Fr. 650. ■ Call after
7 p.m- 'LAB. 65-45.
I STB. JASMIN, in modem
famished 2 rooms, terrace.
BAL. 99-79.
bolldlng, nice
3 .ST. 900.
TO LET
REAL ESTATE
PARIS AND SUBURBS
HIGH CLASS
NE LILLY. BLD. QIA CRICK BARRES
176 sqju.. 3d floor, living + dining-
room (or bedroom) + 2 bedrooms +
3 baths + dressing + Installed
kitchen + maid's soom + garage.
- - FAC
NOTHING OPP OSIT E. PACING
BOI3.FACINO SOUTH. Fr. 5,000.
ALM. 22-23.
STAYING IN PARIS?
We can provide you with a furnished
first-class apartment while owner Is
absent Minimum rental: 3 weeks.
INTER CRBIS
ft Rue du Doetenr-Laneercao*.
Parta-30 - TeL: MAC 46-30.
HOUSING PROBLEMS?
The American Advisory Service
will find the accommodation YOO want
7 AVENUE GBANDE-ARMEE. PAS. 4»29.
NETJTLLY (BLD. 3NKERMAN). 150 aqjn..
haU + salon + separated dtalng-room
+ I bedroom + 1 bath + kitchen 4-
maid’s room + LARGE PRIVATE GAB-
DEN. *T Ar 23-26.
NEAR PLACE AULA, free April 1. fur-
nished 1 1/2 rooms, entrance, kitchen,
bath, linen, etc., ground floor on leafy
■tto. oniet. Fr. ~90d. POL S «-«3.
— — ' 26 •April 6.
PARIS LEFT BANK. March
splendid high class flat. 2*d noor. ter-
race. uninterrupted view, swimming
pool I to 4 persons. 588-70-35.
PALAIS ROYAL, redecorated timfumish-
edi. luxurious 5 ROOMS. BALCONY.
2 baths, telephone. 2 maids’ room*.
Fr. 3.000. BAL. 22-82.
TKOCADERO. 4- room unlumtihod apart-
ment, modern building on garden,
quiet. Pr. 1.300 + ch a r ges.
13TH. well furnished 2-room apartmont
Pr. 600 net. ETO. 34-91.
GAR CUES: 3 rooms, furnished, garden.
Pr. 800. ft month* rental call evenings:
970-29-16.
1BTH, «n BO IS. high class, private park,
apartment luxuriously furnished, saloo,
dining-room + 3 bedrooms, kitchen.
pantTT. S baths, dresalng-roonu I maid’s
room. Pr. 6.000 net. S&-48-83.
16TH. yrUETTE. 6 room*. 3 bedro oms,
kitchen. 3 bathrooms. TELEPHONE,
maid's room, luxe furnished. Fr. 2.600.
SOL. 61-17.
ETOJ1.E. living, bedroom, kitchen, bath,
telephone, well furnished. Pr. 830.
765-73-54.
BELGIUM
luo BRUSSELS. Avenno Uessldor No. 208
to let 6th floor beautiful furnished
apartment, living, halt, 2 bedrooms.
d kitchen, cellar. Visits
bathroom and WLUWUiliGMli fWV*
and conditions: Mr. GIOT. Rue Gustave
Blot 36, 1050 Brussels, Belgium. TeL:
02/48.90.53.
G BEAT BRITAIN
HAMPTON It SONS (established )830>.
Exclusive rumlshed ■ flats end houses
for the more discriminating home-
seeker. 6 Arlington street. S.W.l. Tel.:
London oi 493 8322. Telex: -23341
LONDON. 43 PARR LANE. W.L New
1. 2. ■ 3-room units Maid & switch-
board aervica Prestige address 7-15
guineas dally. Air. Paul — MAY 6801
AT ROHE LN LONDON LTD.. lor Lon-
don's finest furnished properties. 7
Chelsea Embankment London. S.WA
PDA. OlOi.
TO LET
REAL ESTATE
CHEAT BRITAIN
LONDON. For the owt furnished Oats
Is hou*»*. — consult the Specialists:
PHILLIPS & KAY 01-4968933
HENRY A: .lAVES-BELGKAVlA. Wlda selre-
Mon of luxury hats London ol 33a K861
. . IRELAND
LOVELY EDWARDIAN' VELLA on the Cnr-
ragb, near Dublin. Completely mod-
ernized by American, i n acre*., --
ear garage and stalls for 3 horses. £38.
Write: Box 8.952, Harold. Parts.
MALTA
ISLAND. OF MALTA, luxurious bouse
lor summer season, very high class. 5
bedrooms. 3 bathrooms, very large swim-
ming pool with heating system. 3 can.
1 butler. I servant. 1 gardener. £1.000
a month. Possibility of arrangement
for 1 sailor and 1 fishing boat. Write:
Box 73300. Herald. Faria
To Let or For Sate
GREAT BRITAIN
LONDON. lflO luxury apartments anal
houses. JONATHAN, DAVID & Col2 '
New Bond Street. London W.l. 489 9206
Apts., Houses, Land for Sale
PARIS AND SUBURBS
BUTTE tXONTKAKTRE. splendid artist’s
atelier, 70 wgjn. in . duplex. , 2 bed-
rooms. all comfort, terrace, uninterrup-
ted view, on tb e-spot today. 4 to 7 p-m
47 Rue Ga bridle, ISe. SUP. 86-08.
FRENCH PROVINCES
T&ES JOLXE PBOFRXETE KOKHANDE.
caracl£re. 46 min, auto route Ouest.
nombreax bailments am&tatfcs. tau:
conforu teiiphone, Jardln 4,000 sqm.
RenMlgnemenm: TS7-69-12 ou Me. Ta-
plBsslcr. 27-Louvlers.
CANNES EXCEPTIONAL
Apartment-villa, top floor, terrace
260 sqjn.. elevator in the flat. 180
sqJDB.. S rooms. 3 bathrooms. In para,
with swimming pool, very high class.
South with total rtdw overlooking sea.
no opposite. Call: Paris. =2744-20
+ oS-VUlBneove Lon bet. 21-34-46.
MiMil
AUSTRIA
ftpts^ Honses, Land for Safe
morocco *
TANGIER. FOR SALE MOTEL “RcM-
drnce tun." Enulpped mid in optra-.
lion. 30 ol lr«n beauiiirl Igat -''P^
, view over Bnv ol TANGIER Trlrt-:
sum . 000 pm. 20' r pain on inv^iru'ni
Write: 10 Rue Suvtcoy TANGIER
(Morocco ». '
SPAIN
GET UP TO 12% 7EARLY
FROM YOUR INVESTMENT
Buy one of IBSA's magnificent, las- ,
uriously furnished aporunenvs m
Torremoitnos, the most popular holi-
day resort on sputa a lovely
Costa del Sol.
Your Income is guaranteed by a
leading Spanish bonk.
We rem and look aticr thr apart-
ment all ili* year round You pay
no maintenance or repi'lr clurgi-...
Use th* apartment for yourself
whenever you want.
IBSA are Spain's most respected
' ■ Builders and Managers
Since seeing la believing, come and
see usi
FABULOUS HOUSE. RESTAURANT. BAR
DISCOTHEQUE. Ear urgent sale.
ST. ANTON AM &RLBERG. TYROL.
Ski world’s famous Krasy Kanguruh
Enormous potential to further develop
winter and summer trade.
Large sun terrace with aU-ia bar -In
best possible position on ski slopes.
view over Easter.
KRAZY KANGURUH.
sc. Anton am Arlbcrg- Austria.
Tel; St Anton am ArlbcrS 3633-
Are you looking for a secretary. 5;
assistant or other office heip.S
Get instant results through ajS
Classified ad in the Internation- g
al Herald Tribune. Contort Ihes
office newest you or call Paris—
225-28-90
lor prompt and courteous
service-
fiiiniiiHHiiiHiiuiiiiiiiiiiHiinHiiiiniiiiiiiiniimiiiniBi
YOU CAN PLACE CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS AT ANY OF THESE OFFICES (*This star indiccdes offices which also accept Display Advertisements)
FTTROPr* AUSTRIA: *+ KeCm White. Bcnkqasae S. Room 215. Vianns L
Lunurt, (X el>; 6384416)1 OalcneiehiKcho WerbeqeseUachalL Vlanm L
Wellxeile IB. (Tel- 5275BB).
BELGIUM: Mixs Mickey von Tekalenbuiq. 6Z B. de Ireonre*. Bmaaols S. (Tal^
380714); Aqence Roasel. 112 B. Hoyale. Brussels. (TeL: 177480 end 1777 iM);
Aqenca Havas Beige, 13-17 Boulevard Adolph* Max. Brussel*. (I leu 174170).
Tor non-qrouped Gaascial and commeveia] edvertisinq.
conlact head office. Pari*.
BRITISH ISLES And. IRELAND) and SCANDINAVIA-. * International Herald
Tribane. 28 Great Queen Street, London W.CA (TeL: Diapla? Advertising
242 5173/4/5: Classified advertisihq 242 6593.)
FRANCE: PARIS-Se (Head Office): * 21 Sno do Bern. (TeLi 225-2840).
GEHMANY; * Bohn InleaMrilenal XGL 295 Eeeherxhchner landateass*.
8 Frankfurt (Main). (TeL: S6J6J9 and 56^6A1. Telex: 04-M902J
GREECE: £ Mr Alhaaeaslas Ch. goproo. 71 Skonlo Street, Athene- 144. TeL*
621-198.
NETHERLANDS: £ A. Teastaq, 6BA Rnhensstnrat. Amsterdam. (Tel.: 727813);
Van Galderen. 1*2 H. 2. Voosbvrqwal, Amsterdam. (Tei-s 222975); Van
Geld area. 37 WagonxtraaL The Hagae- (TelJ 113753),
ITALY: * A. Sambroba, 55 Via d*Qa M Breeds, 00187 Same. (TeLx B73437V
PORTUGAL: * Bits Ambar. 32 Bna das I analog Verdes. Lisbon.
672793, 662435 and 667318)-
SPAUf: + Satael G. Fajardos. 1 Plaza Csnde de] Valle dm Snehfi. Apt*. 204,
Madrid 15 (TeL* 257 3005).
SWITZERLAND: — General Display and Intamafionai Executive OpportauHios:
Mr. Gay van Tbayne, S Av. du Penptiaxs, 1012 tmocmM. (T- (021) 28 32 42.)
-CnsiSed and qvaaped advortitfiup Triservice EnlesachL 4 Place du
Cirque, Geneva. (TeL: (022)24 22 74.) '■ • '
TURKEY * Mr. Cuneyt E. Koryurek. 12/2 Baytadb Sokak. Teuxsehir. Ankara.
' AMERICAS’ UJLA. and CANADA 4c Arnold M. Obier. btlersationcd
‘ Herald Tribune. 444 Madison Avenue. New York 10022.
(Teu
MEXICO: % Juan Nolan Y Asotaados. Callc Sullivan 87.’ Mexico 4. D.F.
FAR FAST' INDIA: + UG- Dubev. A ll. West End, New Delhi-23
innwita. (TeLi 77253).
JAPAN: * Mr. Tadashi Mori,' Media Representatives. Imu. DaUchl Mori
Buildi nq. 1 -12, 1-Cbome. HaUeUqdxilhl. Mtante-Xu, Tokyo-
PHILIPPINES.- 3k Albert C. Capo testa, Media Representatives, laa. P.Q.
Bow 4.2SS. Manila.
XNMOBILIAKJA BILBAO. SA-, -
Carretera de Cadix.
TorremoUno* iMaiunt 1 -
Tela.: 38-11-31, 38-11-12 E 38-14-16
(Spain i .
ALMOST NEW HOTEL REALTY SPOT
Cost* del Sal. Superb posit Ion. IS bed-
rooms, all with bath, terrace. Ground
Door has dining-room (capacity 40'.
kitchen, stare room*, lounge bar. etc-
Total area with land 400 m2. 896.060
tall equipment and furniLurel 'or rent
17.000. PA. “Butriana.” NESJA
SLARBJSLLa: S S^Tning Andalusian ril-
lage abuUdlng mUe a west MarbrD*.
i *2 mile to beach. Sca/mounialn rie*
Houses with patio from 54-5*50. fiais
SXflSO write: PUEBLO- VIRGINIA.
Camlno de couoian. Martel] a.
SWITZERLAND
In beautiful MONTBEUX-TOWER ft
Attractive apartments & studios with
balcony, for sale in 26-story building. 'll
Panoramic view on mountains
and Lake of Geneva.
On request full description will be sent j
GETT6A. Ave. Tlsi-ot 2. (if,.
CH-U06 Lausanno. Switzerland. ^l|
U.S. A.
ESTABLISHED
REALTY FIRM ,
OFFERS
LAND INVESTMENT '•
OPPORTUNITY TO PURCHASE
INDUSTRIAL. aSSIOSNT^
AND BUSIIIE33 FROPBBTY
Win Exchange. References
with Prospective Piifchawra-
INCOME FUND
ENTERPRISES C0RP.
.: Xs. David Coleman.
Attn.:
Apts- to Share
YOUNG LADY, willing IO *ha» J®
ly flat near 11c &, TAW
seeks preferably » hostess ® r 0 ft2rerSi-
lady lor ihut or Ipng stay. ^9“^
tact. 463-34-84 Parta! 8:15,- fc™--* pjn "
Oft agents.' no photo ■models.
J ii,
Agfa*, JHonacs. j^nd Wanted-
PAHIS AND A?.®" 0 . 8 ® 1
tag-room, 2 bethwfflj- nb
- 3-h
or lfttlLArrdt.'
SEEKING ~ unltthuBN O»>.l of
bedroom*. Area oT^W w
-^SWSfcBF'
r^fnmowial FTenMB^.
j Hi
modern Taoiltiir*.
copter, etc. .
.■ 34 ^^;^- ,